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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. 41, No. 9
MONROE, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1960
10c Per Copy — $3 a Year
MACON DEDICATION—His Excellency the Most Rev. Thomas J. McDonough,
D.D., J.C.D., Bishop of Savannah, is pictured as he blessed St. Joseph’s Hall, addition to
Mt. de Sales-in Macon. To the left of the Bishop is the Rev. Robert Brennan, pastor of
Sacred Heart, Warner Robins. To His Excellency’s right is the Rev. William P. Dowling,
pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes, Columbus.
Addition To Mt. De Sales
Bishop Dedicates New
Saint Josephs Hail
MACON — The Most Rev.
Thomas J. McDonough, D.D.,
J.C.D., Bishop of Savannah,
presided at dedication cere
monies, September 18 th, for
St. Joseph Hall, newest addi
tion to Mount de Sales High
School.
The new building designed
in style to somewhat match
the character of Mercy Hall
consists of three academic
classrooms; study hall; biology
laboratory with its prepara
tion room; business suite con
sisting of office practice room
and typing room; Guidance
room; store; storage facilities;
lavatories; and janitorial facil
ities.
PUN NEW BUILDING FOR
NOTRE DAME BOOK SHOP
SAVANNAH — Construc
tion has began at the new site
of the Notre Dame Book Shop
on the northeast corner of Lib
erty and Lincoln Streets. This
cottage-type structure was de
signed with the thought of pre
serving the architectural at
mosphere of old Savannah and
also to provide an efficient,
modern bookstore operation.
Its exterior will blend with
the handsome new St. Vin-
^Tphoto^pageT™
cent’s Academy building which
is diagonally across from this
location.
The one-story building will
be of masonry construction
with painted stucco finish. The
facade includes an entrance
porch adorned with ornamen
tal iron and_ balanced with a
picture window which will be
used for display.
Plans call for the interior
block wails to be painted and
ceilings of acoustical tile. The
PRAY FOR OUR
PRIESTLY DEAD
REV. ALEXANDER J.
SEMMES, died Sept. 27 1898.
REV. G E O R G E S. O’
BRIEN, died Sept. 29, 1887.
O God, Who didst give to
thy servants by their sacredotal
office, a share in the priesthood
of the Apostles, grant, we im
plore, that they may also be one
of their company forever in
heaven. Though Christ Our
Lord. Amen.
Book Reviews . ' 6
Editorial Comment : 4
Marriage Notices 2
Obituaries 7
Youth Column 5
The Catholic
In America 2
flooring throughout the shop
will be of monolithic terrazzo.
Included in the design is an
office for the Catholic Infor
mation Center. Immediately to
the rear of the building is a
small parking area for custom
ers with additional parking
space available in the Cathe
dral parking lot one block
south of the shop. .
The building is being con
structed by W. J. Teston Con
struction Company and was
designed by John Knox Stacy,
Jr., architect.
The Notre Dame Book Shop
was begun in October, 1953
by the Savannah Deanery,
D.C.C.W. at the direction of
Most Rev. Francis E. Hyland,
then Auxiliary of the Diocese.
Operating as a non-profit shop,
it has made available for sale
Catholic books, prayer books,
pictures, cards and religious
articles with one portion of the
Shop featuring a lending lib
rary. Provisions have been
made in the plans of the new
(Continued on Page 8)
Connected to Mercy Hall by
a covered passage, the struc-
ture is located immediately be-
hind the existing utility build
ing and parallels Columbus
Street. Approximately 9000
square feet of building make
up the new work. Permanence
and ease of maintenance have
dictated many of the aspects
of design and materials. Cam
pus space, at a premium, was
preserved while creating a
unified school group. N. J.
Pascullis was the architect
while Chris R. Sheridan was
the contractor for the new
building.
In use since August 30, the
building is planned to take
care of the increased enroll
ment. Beginning in September
1959 boys were accepted in the
ninth grade. At present there
are 41 boys in grades nine
and ten out of a total enroll
ment of 170.
Mount de Sales High School,
a private school accredited by
the Southern Association of
Colleges and Secondary
Schools, has been in continual
operation since 1876. It is
staffed by the Sisters of Mer
cy, Province of Baltimore. The
faculty for 1960-1961 includes:
Rev. John Fitzpatrick, Sister
M. Aurelia, who is also the
Religious Superior; Sister M.
Consuella, Sr. M. Clare, Sister
M. Agnes, Sister Francis Mary,
Sister M. Alphonsine, Sisters
M. de Sales and Bernadette,
Study Halls; Mrs. A. O.
Brown, Major J. C. McCul
lough, Mrs. Devereaux Jarratt,
Librarian: and Sister M. Feli-
citas, Principal.
Ursuline Sisters Teach At Newly Opened
Our Lady Of Lourdes School In Columbus
Ultra-Modern School
For 3 Year Old Parish
COLUMBUS — On Sept. 6,
Our Lady of Lourdes School in
South Columbus opened its
doors for the first time. But
the school isn’t the only thing
new on the Columbus scene —
so are the sisters who teach
there.
They are four Ursuline sis
ters from Cork, Ireland, who
had been in Columbus barely
two weeks bofore school be
gan. It is the first time any of
the four have been to the
United States and the first
time that two, Mother Im-
maculata and Mother Joseph
had ever been outside of Ire
land. They were extended an
official welcome by His Ex
cellency, Bishop Thomas J.
McDonough, Bishop of Savan
nah a few days after their
arrival.
. Mother Joseph and Mother
Paul are from County Cork;
Mother Imm aculata, from
Dundalk; and Mother Mar
garet Mary, from Tipperary.
The sisters were welcomed
on their arrival with a dinner
at their brand-new convent,
followed by a reception at
tended by all the sisters of the
Columbus area. The following
day the entire parish got their
chance to meet the sisters who
had left their homes far be
hind to teach children in
America.
The coming of the sisters
and the opening of the school
capped three years of work by
the Rev. William P. Dowling,
pastor, who started the parish
from the ground up.
Our Lady of Lourdes Parish
serves the south Columbus
area and many of the Catholic
personnel from the neighbor
ing Fort Benning military res
ervation.
(SEE PHOTO PAGE 8)
The ultra-modern school will
serve boy and girls from kin
dergarten through the eighth
grade. Mother Margaret Mary
is principal. In addition to the
sisters, the teaching staff in
cludes five lay teachers.
Mines Spiritual Kin To
Irish Presentation Sisters
The history of the Ursuline
Sisters, recently arrived to
help staff the new school of
Our Lady of Lourdes in Col
umbus, reveals a spiritual kin
ship between them and the
Irish Presentation Sisters, who
teach at Sacred Heart School,
Warner Robins. For, the Pre
sentation Sisters owe their ori
gin to the Apostolic zeal of an
Irish expatriate residing in an
Ursuline Convent.
The Ursuline Sisters were
founded by St. Angela Merici,
a contemporary of the great
St. Charles Borromeo, pioneer
in the Christian education of
youth. St. Angela was much
impressed with the work of
St. Charles in the Christian
education of boys and determ
ined to devote her life to the
Christian education of girls.
She converted her home in
Desenzano,
where she
little girls
instructed
ments of
work
was
Italy, into a school
daily gathered the
of the town and
them in the ele-
Christianity. Her
highly successful
and she opened another school
at Brescia, a neighboring town.
On November 25, 1535, her
Community was founded with
twelve companions at a small
house near the Church of St.
Afra in Brescia. St. Angela
died in 1540 and was canonized
by Pope Pius VII in 1807.
The Ursulines soon spread
to France and it was at their
Convent in Rue St. Jacques in
Paris that Nano Nagle, a pious
Irish lady who had fled the
penal laws in Ireland conceiv
ed the idea that was to culmi
nate the founding of the
Presentation U a n o
Nagle knew the dangers to the
faith presented by the oppres
sive penal laws in her native
land and determined to emu
late the activities of St. Angela
in Ireland.
With the help of the Bishop
of Cork, Nano was able to
have four Irish girls train at
Rue St. Jacques and return
to Ireland. This was the be
ginning of the Ursulines in
Ireland.
But the Ursulines taught
rich as well as poor children.
Nano Nagel wanted to devote
her life exclusively to the
teaching of poor children and
founded the Irish Presentation
Sisters, who four years ago
came to Warner Robins.
Today there are various
congregations of Ursuline Sis
ters with convents throughout
the world in Europe, Africa,
Australia and North and South
America where the ■ sisters not
only teach but are actively
engaged in Missionary activi
ties.
But the spirit of St. Angela
Merici is particularly strong
in the Diocese of Savannah.
For, while the foundress of the
Irish Presentation Sisters was
trained by the Ursulines,
Mother McCauley, foundress
of the Sisters of Mercy made
her Novitiate with the Pre
sentation Sisters, and the Sis
ters of the Most Blessed Sacra
ment made their first Noviti
ate under the Sisters of Mercy.
All four communities teach in
the Savannah Diocese.
SSi
V#
OUR LADY OF LOURDES SCHOOL AND CONVENT
Motor Chapel Visits 32 Towns
Catholic Church ‘Rolls’ Through Diocese
STATESBORO — The Cath
olic Church literally rolled into
thirty-two Georgia towns this
past summer. Father John Bar
ry, Glenmary Home Mission-
er, was at the wheel. He was
driving the Dominican Motor
Chapel borrowed from Father
-Patrick -Wetfaht O.-P.y of Spring-
bank, South Carolina.
Over one thousand persons
were introduced to the ele
ments of Catholic worship
through a guided tour of the
motor chapel. Explanations of
the Mass, the Sacraments, and
Catholic devotions were made
while visitors inspected the al
tar and vestments, the confes
sional and the stations of the
Cross.
Priests, seminarians, and lay
apostles were aboard when the
truck roiled up. Visiting homes
during the day, they left hand
bills and a verbal invitation to
visit the Chapel that evening.
At eight p. m. the outdoor
service began. Bible reading,
preaching, the religious movies
made up the program. Then
the lights in the motor chapel
were lighted and the visitors
were invited to tour the Chap-
BISHOP DEDICATES
SAINT VINCENT'S
SAINT VINCENT'S ACADEMY—Pictured here is the new St. Vincent Academy building dedicated by Bishop
McDonough on Sunday, September 25t,h.—(Andrew Bunn Photo).
SAVANNAH — The hand
some new St. Vincent’s Acad
emy building on the south side
of Liberty Street between Ab-
ercorn and Lincoln was dedi
cated on Sunday, September
25. His Excellency, the Most
Reverend Thomas J. McDon
ough, D.D., J.C.D., Bishop of
Savannah, presided at the ce
remonies held at 4:30 ,p. m. in
the outdoor amphitheatre.
Bishop McDonough blessed
both the interior and exterior
of the new structure and was
the speaker on this occasion.
St. Vincent’s Academy was
established in 1845 at its pre
sent site by the Sisters of Mer
cy. Expansion followed expan
sion but because of the de
terioration of the original por
tions of the structure, it was
necessary to raze them and in
their place the new St. Vin
cent’s Academy was erected.
Earlier this month it opened its
doors to more than 270 girls,
the largest enrollment in the
history of the Academy.
- Built at a cost of $300,000,
the split-level, L-shaped build
ing is three stories high in one
section and two stories in the
other. It contains 10 class
rooms, a science laboratory,
principal’s office, visitor’s
room, health room, lay teach
ers’ lounge, newspaper room,
locker rooms and other facili
ties. One area to be used at
present as an auditorium will,
in succeeding years, be oc
cupied by three classrooms.
Access to the new classrooms
is from open corridors enclos
ed only by ornamental brick
work. The courtyard has been
developed into an open-air am
phitheatre which will be used
as an attractive and unusual
background for dramatic pre
sentations.
The new building structure
containing two classrooms and
a cafeteria and with the con
vent building on the west. This
latter structure houses the
home economics, the commer
cial departments, the library
and the chapel, in addition to
the living quarters of the nuns
who teach at St. Vincent’s as
well as at Cathedral School.
This blending of the new and
the old has produced a block-
long building whose architec
tural beauty is in perfect har
mony with the serene beauty
of the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist in the background.
Thomas-Driscoll-Hutton were
the architects and engineers,
and Harry Roland was the con
tractor.
In June, 1959, the Building
Fund Drive was launched by
the St. Vincent’s Alumnae As
sociation and the Sisters of
Mercy and is continuing for
the next ten years.
Members of the clergy, sis
ters of the various communi
ties in Savannah, Alumnae and
friends of St. Vincent’s joined
the Sisters of Mercy in cele
brating the dedication of their
new school building.
el.
Father Barry regards the
motor chapel as one of the
most effective means of pre
senting the Catholic Faith to
southern rural communities.
He is striving to obtain funds
for a motor chapel to do year
’round service in the Georgia
missions.
10 From
Diocese
At Belmont
SAVANNAH — Ten Cath
olic students from this diocese
have enrolled for the Fall
Term at Belmont Abbey Col
lege, Belmont, N. C.
William B. Daniel has enroll
ed as a senior. A native of
Augusta, he will be a candi
date in June for the Bachelor
of Arts degree, majoring in
Business Administration.
Registering as juniors are
David J. Bohorfoush of Mil-
ledgeville; and Thomas G.
Branch of Savannah.
Richard J. Buttimer is a
member of the sophomore
class and a native of Savannah.
Beginning their college ca
reers as freshmen are Edward
M. Buttimer, John W. James,
Robert M. Kelleher, John J.
McAlpin, Joseph M. McDon
ough and Michael J. Torma,
all of Savannah.
With over 500 students, the
Abbey was compelled to limit
the enrollment to the same as
last.year due to lack of physi
cal facilities. A large number
of applicants for admission to
(Continued on Page 8)
GOLDEN JUBILEE OF U. S. CHARITIES—The 1960
National Conference of Catholic Charities convention in New
York, September 23 to 27, marked the golden jubilee of the
organization’s establishment in the United States and the
115th anniversary of the founding of the Society of St. Vin
cent de Paul, oldest Catholic lay charitable group in the
U. S. Presiding at the meeting were: Msgr. George H. Guil-
foyle, of New York, national president, and George E.
Heneghan, of St. Louis, Mo., president, Superior Council of
the Society of St. Vincent de Paul in the United States.