Newspaper Page Text
8—THE BULLETIN, September 3, 1960
lister Lillian, C.S.C.
Is Named Superior
VISIT FT. STEWART — Enjoying an afternoon snack of cookies and ice cream at the
post Service Club are four of the 35 children from St. Mary’s Home for Girls. With the girls are
Major (Chaplain) John E. Diener, post Catholic Chaplain, and Mrs. Anthony B. Purdy of Sav
annah.—(U. S. Army Photo)
Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days
Religious Community Approves
Changes In Customs, Spiritual
Exercises And Wearing Apparel
WASHINGTON, D. C., — Sis
ter Lillian, C.S.C., formerly of
Savannah, Ga., Dean of Women
at Dunbarton College here for
the last 20 years, has been nam
ed Superior of Cardinal Cush
ing College for Women, Boston,
Mass. She assumed her new
duties this week.
At Cushing College Sister Lil
lian will be Superior of the reli
gious community of sisters that
staff the school. She will also
advise and assist the President,
Sister Berda Clare, C.S.C., and
the Dean of Women, Sister Au
gustine, C.S.C. Sister Berda
Clare has been president of
Cushing since 1954 and also was
Superior for the same period.
The former Miss Lucille Glea
son, Sister Lillian comes from a
prominent and respected family.
Her father is John W. Gleason,
91 year old retired cotton com
pany executive and church and
civic leader in their home town
of Savannah, Ga. Mr. Gleason
was made a Knight of St. Greg
ory by the Pope in 1934 for his
devoted services to charity, es
pecially in the care of orphans.
Sister Lillian entered the
Holy Cross Order in 1922 while
a student at St. Mary’s College,
Notre Dame, Indiana, founded
in 1842 and the largest and best
known of the schools conducted
MT. WASHINGTON, Md.—
Having completed their novit
iate training, fifteen Sisters of
Mercy pronounced their tem
porary vows for three years on
August 16, at the 6:30 o’clock
Mass in Mount Saint Agnes
Chapel, Mt. Washington, Mary
land. The Reverend William
Welsh, S.J., celebrated the Mass
and received the vows of the
Sisters.
Those making their vows
were: Sisters Christina Marie
Daily, Savannah, Ga.; M. Estelle
Kirby, Baltimore; M. Trinita
Brearton, Cincinnati, Ohio; M.
ft. ata Steinkamp, Baltimore,
Md.; Jude Marie Dyslin, Chat
tanooga, Tenn.; M. Arthur Luc
ky, Augusta, Ga.; M. Suzanne
Wilhelm, Baltimore, Md.; M.
Cordette Diehl, Baltimore, Md.;
Regina Marie Donohue, Balti
more, Md.; John Mary Biggs,
Macon, Ga.; M. Benita Nickel-
sen, Pensacola, Fla.; Joseph Ma
rie Mullen, Baltimore, Md.; M.
Joseph Ann Leverich, Cincin
nati, Ohio; Stephen Marie Cos
tello, Washington, D. C.; and
M. Chanel Fasola, Savannah,
Georgia.
' The ceremony of the Recep
tion of the Habit and Perpetual
Profession took place at 9:30 o’-
lcock in the same chapel on Au
gust 16. Monsignor Joseph A.
Fils, pastor of St. Dominic
Church, Baltimore offered the
Mass and presided at the cere
mony. The Reverend Felix F.
Cardegna, S.J., of Woodstock
College, preached the sermon.
Twenty-eight postulants re
ceived the Habit. Their names
in religion and the parishes
from which they entered are:
Rose Marie Nueslein, Sacred
Heart, Savannah, Ga.; Sister M.
James, Betty Faye Harper, Ca
thedral, Savannah, Ga.; Sister
M. Angela, Mary Geraldine
Floyd, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel,
Baltimore, Md.; Sister M. Regis,
Mary Catherine Bunting, Shrine
of the Sacred Heart, Baltimore,
Md.; Sister M. Lloyd, Margaret
Mary Robinson, St. Dominic’s,
Oyster Bay, N. Y.; Sister M.
Stella, Margaret Catherine Spe-
ORTHODOX
(Continued from Page 1)
as it is dogma with Rome, it is
tradition with us. We believe
and practice, but we have never
made it dogma. Although we
have no such term as Mariology,
Marianism is very real and true
for us.”
The Archbishop was in De
troit to officiate at special serv-
ives honoring the feast of the
Assumption of the Blessed Vir
gin Mary at Assumption Greek
Orthodox Church.
Polish Bishops
To Meet Sept 8
BERLIN, (NC) — His Emi
nence Stefan Cardinal Wyszyn-
ski, Primate of Poland, has sum
moned the Bishops of Poland to
a meeting on September 8, the
feast of the Nativity of the
Blessed Virgin, it was reported
hero.
by the Holy Cross Sisters in the
United States. She took her final
vows as a Sister in 1927.
Before being assigned to Dun
barton College as Dean of Wom
en in 1940, Sister Lillian taught
at St. Theresa’s Academy, Boise,
Idaho, and at St. Mary’s the
Wasath College, Salt Lake City,
Utah.
Few educators have had such
a wide and intimate asquaint-
ance among alumnae, students,
parents and friends of the
schools she has taught at than
this much-loved and respected
sister.
Thanks to a remarkable
memory, soft-spoken Sister
Lillian, for instance, can recall
nearly all of the upwards of
1,000 young women who attend
ed Dunbarton while she was
dean. T® 0
It is safe to say that they re
call her, too, and most happily,
because of the warmth and
graciousness of her personality
and her sincere desire to help
them.
As one Dunbarton alumna
well expresses it:
‘‘Sister Lillian has been a real
friends to all of us. We could
always go to her with our ques
tions and problems, and she
would always give us the an
swer.”
no, St. Rose of Lima, Summit,
N. J.; Sister M. Vincentia, Mary
Eileen Wilhelm, Holy Family,
Mobile, Ala.; Sister M. Fabian;
Elizabeth Ann Linehan, St.
Anne’s, Arlington, Va.; Sister M.
Peter, Judith Ann McGowan,
St. Anthony’s, Ensley, Ala.; Sis
ter M. Roberta, Judith Ann
Pinnell, Sacred Heart, Augusta,
Ga.; Sister M. Norberta, Marga
ret Mary Beatty, Our Lady of
Mt. Carmel, Baltimore, Md.;
Sister M. Campion, Gloria Es
ther McDonald, St. Francis
Xavier’s, Mobile, Alabama.
Sister M. Ethel, Elizabeth
Ann Cannon, St. Cecilia’s, Mo
bile, Ala.; Sister M. Edna, Elaine
Marie Quinn, St. Agnes, Arling
ton, Va.; Sister M. Hope, Carol
Cecilia Griffith, St. Joseph’s,
Macon, Ga.; Sister M. Cecil,
Frances Joan Quadrella, Sacred
Heart, Savannah, Ga.; Sister M.
Lillian, Frances Elizabeth Hath
away, Little Flower, Woodstock,
Md.; Sister M. Arnold, Cath
erine Adele Dorsey, Our Lady
of Perpetual Help, Baltimore,
Md.; Sister M. Hilda, Mary Mar
garet Harper, Blessed Sacra
ment, Savannah, Ga.; Sister M.
Benjamin, Joan Jude Mathews,
Blessed Sacrament, Savannah,
Ga.; Sister M. Louis, Sheri Ann
Clay, Little Flower, Mobile,
Ala.; Sister M. Donald, Ida Lou
ise Donnolly, St. Joan of Arc,
Mobile, Alabama.
Sister M. Emily, Joan Marga
ret Dumm, St. Agnes, Arling
ton, Va.; Sister M. Genevieve,
Elaine Annete Schauber, Cor
pus Christi, Elsmere, Del.; Sis
ter M. Serena, Lillian Geraldine
Llufrio, St. Peter’s, Baltimore,
Md.; Sister M. Audrey, Mary
Ellen Keeffe, Holy Trinity,
Washington, D. C.; Sister M.
Adelaide: Jane Marie Gerety,
Little Flower, Washington, D.C.;
Sister M. Basil, Linda Renee
Ayash, St Theresa, Albany, Ga.,
Sister M. Rachel.
Nine Sisters pronounced per
petual vows. They are: Sister
M. Edna Barrins, Silver Springs,
Md.; Sara Worley, Danville, Va.;
Caritas Cook, Arlington, Va.;
Joseph Mary Maguhfe, Balti
more, Md.; Concetta Crowe, Mo
bile, Ala.; M. Rosina Bayliss,
Baltimore, Md.; M. Bartholo
mew Walker, Thomasville, Ga.;
M. Sarto Zoghby, Mobile, Ala.;
and Angela Marie Ebberwein,
Savannah, Georgia.
Present at the ceremony, in
addition to Monsignor Ells and
Father Cardegna, S. J., were:
Rev. E. Melville Taylor; Very
Rev. Joseph B. Coyne; Rev.
Thomas Baumgartner; Rev.
David Callahan; Rev. Martin J.
Casey, S.J.; Rev. Leon A. Jas-
ter, S.J.; Rev. Charles J. Mc
Bride, S.J.; Rev. John H. Mc
Call; Rev. Joseph G. McCourt;
Rev. William T. McGrory; Rev.
Timothy M. Mullen; Rev. John
J. Murphy; Rev. James A. Pet
erson; Rev. John Ryan; Rev.
Edward J. Stokes, S.J., and the
Rev. Edward J. Storck.
LEVELING
True character is measured by
living the kind of life your
admirers think you do.
SUNDAY, Septembeer 4 —
Thirteenth Sunday after Pente
cost. Generally this date is the
feast of St. Moses, Prophet. The
Hebrew leader and lawgiver is
described in the Book of Exodus
in the Bible. He died at the age
of 120 on the borders of the
Promised Land.
MONDAY, September 5 — St.
Laurence Justinian, Bishop-
Confessor, He refused the offer
of. a brilliant marriage, fled
from his home at Venice and
joined the Canons Regular of
St. George. He became the first
Patriarch of Venice and died
in 1456 at the age of 74.
TUESDAY, September 6—St.
acharias, Phophet. He lived in
the sixth century, B.C. He was
CONFERENCE
(Continued from Page 1)
Guatemala, and the “cold war”
amplifies the volume.
In the face of all this, the
United States must exercise the
utmost patience. If the United
States were to retaliate with
any show of force at all there
is every likelihood we would
suffer a catastrophic propagan
da setback, not only in this part
of the world but almost every
where. It is worth noting that
students round the globe are
given to demonstrations these
days, and there is a suspicion
here that, given a small excuse
and hidden Red leadership, stu
dents in Latin America would
stage some huge demonstrations
against us.
There are many explanations
for this situation. First of all,
the communists have been ac
tive in Latin America for a long
time, and today are more active
and better organized than ever.
Also, Latin America has not es
caped the unrest that is almost
everywhere in the world. The
five-nation Inter-A m e r i c a n
Peace Commission told the
Costa Rica conference that the
people of Latin America want
very much to improve their eco
nomic and social conditions.
And it must not be forgotten
that there is naturally a certain
resentment of a nation that is
dominant economically and po
litically in any area.
This brings us to another seri
ous cause of our present poor
relations with Latin America,
and one that many people in
this country may find surpris
ing. "Why, we have just taken
for granted . . ." many U. S.
citizens will say. They mean we
have "taken Latin America for
granted/' Thai is precisely what
a large number of Latin Amer
icans resent. They feel naturally
close to us, but they also feel
that the U. S. has lavishly court
ed the goodwill or European
countries, especially since
World War II, and has neglected
its "good neighbors" to the
south. They feel they could have
gone far toward solving their
economic and social problems if
they had been given pari of the
financial aid the U. S. has given
to European nations. They feel
"left out."
The Reds can be counted on
to increase, if they can, the
many causes of ferment in Latin
America. They are not going to
be thwarted by mere talk. It is
going to take constructive ac
tion.
the son of Barachias and be
came known in Israel during
the reign of King Darius as a
contemporary of the Prophet
Aggeus. Both contributed by
their exhortations to speeding
up the work of the building of
the Second Temple.
WEDNESDAY, September 7 —
St. Nemorius and Companions,
Martyrs. Registered in the Ro
man Martyrology as St. Nemor
ius, he is also known as St.
Memorius but is more popularly
venerated at St. Mesmin. He
was a deacon of Troyes, France.
With five companions he was
sent by St. Lupus, under whom
he served, to the camp of Aa-
tila the Hun, who then was rav
aging Gaul, to implore mercy of
the Barbarian leader. Attila had
all six beheaded, about 451.
However, the prayers of Bishop
St. Lupus were answered and
Troyes was spared from ravage.
THURSDAY, September 8 —
The Nativity of the Blessed Vir
gin. The feast commemorates
the birth, free from original sin,
of the Jewish maiden of the
house of David, destined to be
come the Mother of God. Her
parents were SS. Joachim and
Anne.
FRIDAY, September 9 — St.
Peter Claver, Confessor. Fie was
the son of a farmer, born in
1581 at Verdu, near Barcelona,
Spain. He joined the Jesuits in
1609. Stationed at Majorca, he
was inspired by St. Alphonsus
Rodriguez with the desire to do
mission work in America. He
was sent in 1610 to Caragena in
Central America, the central
slave mart of the West Indies,
and for the next 40 years de
voted himself to the welfare of
Negro slaves. He is said to have
baptized and cared for more
than 300,000 of them. He died in
1654. He was canonized in 1888
and declared the patron of all
Catholic missions among Ne
groes in 1896.
SATURDAY, September 10 —
St. Nicholas of Tolentino, Con
fessor. He was born in answer
to the prayers of a holy mother
and was promised before his
birth to the service of God. His
austerities were conspicious
even in the strict order df the
Hermits of St. Augustine, to
which he belonged. He died in
1310.
Recent Changes
In Cairo Life
Affect Religion
CAIRO, U. A. R., (NC) — The
Pyramids stand unchanged in
the sand and gravel of the des
ert outside Cairo, but many a
change has come in recent years
to this largely Moslem and part
ly Christian city.
The changes in Cairo are re
flected to some extent through
out the country. Some of them
are bound to affect religion.
Some are only in their early
stages. What their final outcome
may be is still a matter of con
jecture — sometimes anxious
conjecture.
Those who knew Cairo in the
1930s remember it as the faded
capital of an Egyptian mon
archy, with British troops sta
tioned in its Citadel. The Egyp
tian monarchy went out in the
revolution of July, 1952. Today
Cairo is the capital of the Unit
ed Arab Republic under Presi
dent Gamal Abdel Nasser, who
has improved the city’s appear
ance and has given it some of
his own energy. Now from new-
old Cairo on the historic Nile a
strong current flows into the
troubled seas of world affairs.
I heard President Nasser give
a lengthly address on policy at
the opening session of the Na
tional Union, the official and
only political organization in
the country. An erect, square
shouldered man of 42, he wore
a dark business suit, with the
angles of a folded white hand
kerchief showing abhve his
breast pocket. He spoke for an
hour and 40 minutes in a low-
pitched voice, with emphasis
but without gestures. I am told
that he can be an impassioned
speaker before a multitude.
One hardly ever hears or sees
the name “Egypt” in official
statements here now. Since
1958 it is the Southern Region—
Syria is the Northern Region—•
of the United Arab Republic. So
far, the U.A.R. has a provisional
constitution. A cabinet minister
told me that the National As
sembly, convened in July, “will
formulate a permanent consti
tution.”
St. Mary’s
Girls Visit
Fort Stewart
FORT STEWART, Ga. —
Thirty-five Savannah girls were
guests of Fort Stewart this week
when they visited and “inspect
ed” this post at the invitation
of the Catholic Women’s Sodali
ty.
Arriving by bus from St.
Mary’s Home for Girls in Sav
annah, they were greeted by
Captain (Chaplain) Thomas
Early and immediately started
out on what was to become a
memorable day for the sex
which is usually associated with
dolls and housekeeping.
After splashing happily about
in Weaver Pool in the morning,
they were taken to the 169th
Engineer Battalion’s mess hall
for lunch, to the surprise and
delight of the engineers in from
the field for their noon meal.
Undaunted by rain, the girls
visited the 714th Medical Com
pany for a look at the snake ex
hibition, went to the Service
Club for movies, games and a
snack and then were taken on a
tour of the Catholic Chapel by
Major (Chaplain) John E. Die
ner.
Tired after a day of sight
seeing unlike any other trips
they had taken, the girls re
turned to Savannah satisfied,
and with most of their questions
answered. Well, can anybody
answer all a woman’s questions?
9,000
(Continued from Page 1)
Most of the principals who
were in charge of the schools
during the 1959-60 school year
have been reassigned this year.
Among the new principals,
though, are Sister Mary Fidelis,
R.S.M., for St. Vincent’s Acade
my, Savannah; Sister Mary
Monica, R.S.M., for Iioly Family
School, Columbus; Sister Loret
ta Joseph, C.S.J., for St. Francis
Xavier School, Brunswick; Sis
ter Mary Pauline, C.S.J., for St.
John’s School, Valdosta; Sister
Mary Gerald, C.S.J., for the new
St. Mary’s School, Augusta; Sis
ter Mary Agnes, O.F.M., for St.
Anthony’s School, Savannah;
and the Ursuline Principal at
the new Our Lady of Lourdes
School, Columbus.
Cuba Strikes
At Freedom
Of Religion
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (NC)
— Cuba’s government has
launched a drive against relig
ious freedom and is training
Red spies to spread the com
munist revolution throughout
Latin America, the U. S. charg
ed here.
The accusations against the
regime of Premier Fidel Castro
were made in a document re
leased by the U. S. delegation
to the emergency session of the
Organization of American
States. The document stated:
“Cuba is establishing a train
ing program for communist ag
ents and guerillas to spread the
communist revolution through
out Latin America. This is be
ing done through an interna
tional work brigade recently es
tablished in Cuba with the sup
port of the Soviet-sponsored
World E’ederation of Democratic
Youth.
“The Cuba government has
opened the assault on the re
maining vestige of individual
liberty in Cuba •—• religious
freedom,”
ST. LOUIS, (NC)—Big changes
in the spiritual exercises, cus
toms, and wearing apparel of
the Sisters of St. Joseph of
Carondolet, Mo., were announc
ed here.
According to an (Aug. 19)
statement by Mother Eucharista
Galvin, Mother General of the
Sisters of St. Joseph of Caron
dolet, the new decrees affect
more than 4,300 Religious lo
cated on the United States
mainland, in Hawaii and Japan.
Sisters of St. Joseph, long for
bidden by their rule to drive
cars, may now do so, the mother
general said. Modifications of
the habit have been made to
allow for driving.
Mother Eucharista also said
that each of the five provinces
of the congregation may now
be subdivided into regions, with
the consent of the order’s gen
eral council. Provincial super
iors can then delegate certain
duties to a regional superior.
Other changes promulgated by
the mother general are:
—All community prayers will
be said in English.
■—Required spiritual reading
may be done either in commu
nity or in private.
—Various prayers, such as the
Litany of the Saints, have been
VIENNA, (Radio, NC) — His
Eminence Francis Cardinal
Spellman, for years a favorite
whipping-boy of Iron Curtain
propaganda, was mentioned in
the Moscow spy trial of U-2
pilot Francis Gary Powers.
Under direct examination by
Soviet prosecutor Roman A.
Rudenko, Mr. Powers testified
before the Soviet court that
Cardinal Spellman was among
the dignitaries who had visited
the classified American air base
at Adana, Turkey. Mr. Powers
was stationed at Adana, before
the U-2 flight on which he was
shot down at Sverdlovsk, deep
in the Soviet Union, last May 1.
On hearing the name of the
Archbishop of New York, who
is also Military Vicar for Cath
olics in the U. S. armed forces,
Mr. Rudenko said:
“So Cardinal Spellman inter
ested himself in military bas
es?”
“I would say he was interest
ed in military personnel,” Mr.
Powers replied.
When the prosecutor asked if
Cardinal Spellman gave his
blessings to persons engaged in
espionage activity, Mr. Powers
answered:
“I think he wouldn’t think too
much of what a person does as
what he is.”
(Cardinal Spellman offered
his midnight Mass last Christ
mas for U. S. servicemen and
their dependents at the Incirlik
air base at Adana, Turkey. It
was the ninth Christmas the
U. S. Military Vicar had spent
visiting American servicemen
overseas.
(Following the Mass, the
Cardinal was guest of honor at
a special reception at the Incir
lik base airmen’s club. He flew
from Adana, which is in the
southern part of Turkey near St.
Paul’s native city of Tarsus, to
Izmir, in the west, at 9 a. m. on
Christmas day.)
Flaving his name brought up
in a communist trial was no
new thing for the New York
prelate. His name came up in
Budapest, Hungary, at the 1949
trial of His Eminence Jozsef
Cardinal Mindszenty, and again
in Poland in 1953, when Bishop
Czeslav Kaczmarek of Kielce
was tried and sentenced.
Last March, when a Chinese
communist court sentenced Ma-
ryknoll’s Bishop James E. Walsh
to a 20-year prison term, Card
inal Spellman’s name was also
brought up. The Chinese Reds
charged that in 1948, “dispatch
ed by U. S. imperialism and the
Vatican (Bishop Walsh) came to
China together with Cardinal
Francis Spellman, U. S. imperi
alist, to make counterrevolu
tionary ‘emergency’ arrange
ments with a view to under
mining the Chinese People’s
revolutionary cause.”
discontinued; others have been
shortened or replaced.
-—Minor changes in the habit
include replacement of the cinc
ture with a braided belt and
the shortening of the Rosary
worn on the left side. Scarfs
replace shawls and certain types
of coats may be worn in cold
climates.
Among the decrees forwarded
to Rome for approval by the
Iioly See was a major change
in the making of vows. The
change would provide for the
making of vows for a period of
two years at the time of first
profession, following the noviti
ate, and for a period of three
years at the second profession.
Previously vows had been re
newed annually prior to final
profession.
Mother Eucharista added that
in accord with the wishes of
the Holy See, the Sisters of St.
Joseph will open a mission in
South America as soon as pos
sible.
The Sisters of St. Joseph of
Carondolet teach in 249 parish
schools in the United States and
conduct 64 high schools in addi
tion to the five colleges for
women. The congregation also
conducts hospitals, homes for
children, and missions among
the Indians.
Cardinal Spellman has been
under particular fire in propa
ganda broadcasts from commu
nist countries since his August
6 address during the Interna
tional Eucharistic Congress at
Munich, Germany, and his later
visit to American bases near the
Iron Curtain.
Moscow Radio (on Aug. 8)
said that Cardinal Spellman in
Munich had advocated "the in
creased arming of the West." It
said that during his 20 years as
Archbishop of New York he has
"preached only a very few times
from the pulpit," adding: "Bui
he has traveled dozens of limes
abroad as the special emissary
of ihe governing oligarchy of
the United States."
i -W
Hiss Turnberg j
Receives Habit,
ALBANY — Miss Martha Ann
Turnberg, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl E. Turnberg of Al
bany, Ga., received the habit of
a Benedictine Sister at a Sol
emn High Mass in the chapel
of Sacred Heart Convent, Cull
man, Ala., on Thursday, Aug. 11.
The Rt. Rev. Abbot Bede
Luibel, O.S.B., of St. Bernard
Abbey near Cullman celebrated
the Mass and officiated at cere
monials of investiture and pro
fession, which immediately pre
ceded the Offertory. Besides
giving Miss Turnberg the reli
gious habit, the Abbot also re
ceived the triennial vows of
one novice and the perpetual
vows of two temporally pro
fessed Benedictine nuns.
Robed and veiled in white as
a bride of Christ, Miss Turn
berg, along with the other three
principals in the reception-pro
fession ceremonies, entered the
chapel as aspirants in a proces
sion of officiating and attending
clergy, and more than a hun
dred Benedictine Sisters of the
Diocese of Mobile-Birmingham.
When the ceremony of making
her a novice was completed,
Miss Martha Arm Turnberg had
become Sister Mary Judith,
O.S.B. ,
The present Sister Mary
Judith Turnberg is a native of
Philadelphia, Pa. Five years ago
her parents moved to Albany,
Ga. Last May she was graduated
from Sacred Heart Academy,
Cullman, having entered that
high school as a sophomore.
Prior to her reception of the
holy habit, she had begun her
college work with a summer-
school course of studies at Sa
cred Heart College, on the same
campus as the aforesaid aca
demy. ;
RECEIVE SCOUT AWARDS — Four Boy Scouts at Fort Benning pose with the chaplain
after receiving Ad Altare Dei (For the Altar of God) Awards. Left to right are Star Scouts
Mark and Michael Zanin of Troop 27, sons of Lt. Col. and Mrs. John B. Zanin of Twin Rocks,
Pa., Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Edward Curran of Philadelphia, Pa., Catholic chaplain, 1st Class Scout
Ronnie Dean, Troop 27, son of M-Sgt. and Mrs. Paul H. Dean of Louisville, Ky., and Life
Scout Richard Gasperini, Troop 127, son of Lt. Col. and Mrs. Silvio E. Gasperini of Stambaugh,
Mich. The boys are students in Holy Family School and Pacelli High School in Columbus, Ga.
—(IT, S, Army Photo
A
person - to - person Service
cili uour Lankina needs
'or all ijour banning
SAVANNAH BANK & Trust Co.
SAVANNAH. GEORGIA MEMBER F.D.I.C.
Georgians Receive Habits;
Make Profession Of Vows
Long Subject of Red Attack
Trial Of Powers Brings Bp
Name Of Cardinal Spellman