Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.) 1958-1962, October 01, 1960, Image 6
B v .-\Grij o—inE its u LLJir.rj.iN, October 1, l§b9 Mrs. Eileen Hail Resigns Leo 1 Zuber Edits look Review Section Effective with the current issue of THE BULLETIN, the book review section will be under the general editorship of Leo J. Zuber. Mr. Zuber succeeds Mrs. Eileen Hall who has edited this section for the past 15 years. Mrs. Hall recently ac cepted a position in the Georgia State College lib rary and due to the press of these new duties, found if necessary to resign as editor of this section. The editors will miss Mrs. Hall and deeply appreciate the out standing column she has ed ited for THE BULLETIN. Mr. Zuber and his family are members of St. Thomas More Parish, Decatur. He is Assist ant Regional Director for Spe cial Programs with the Atlan ta Regional Office of the Hous ing and Home Finance Agen cy, a Federal agency with pro gram interests in the housing and urban renewal fields. Mr. Zuber’s responsibilities with the agency include activities over the 8-state Southeast re lated. to the Urban Planning Assistance Program and the Community Renewal Program authorized by Congressional enactment of 1954 and 1959 respectively. Mr. Zuber is a graduate of Holy Childhood School, Har bor Springs, Michigan, of Wayne University, Detroit, and the University of Michigan. He has also attended Clark Uni versity, Worcester, Mass., the University of Tennessee, and the University of Buffalo. Dur ing World War II he served in the U. S. Navy. He has served on the staffs of the Tennessee Valley Au thority, the Tennessee State Planning Commission, the At- LEO J. ZUBER ianta Metropolitan Planning Commission, in state, regional and metropolitan planning functions. He. has also served on the faculties of Marist Col lege, Georgia State - College for Business Administration, and the Georgia Institute of Tech nology. He has been president of the Georgia Section as well as, of the Southeast Chapter of the American Institute of Plan ners; in 1957 he founded and for two years he edited THE SOU’EASTER, the official publication of the Southeast Chapter. In 1953 he was Con gress Director of the Southern Regional Congress on City Planning. . By appointment of the Bish op of Nashville, he participat ed in the organization of the Catholic Committee, of the South. He has contributed re views to THE BULLETIN since 1949. *lA/riferd an J limeade er3 EDITED BY LEO J. ZUBER 2332 North Decatur Rd. Decatur, Georgia A. M. D. G. For the greater glory of God and for the spiritual benefits of authors, publishers, review ers and readers. THE SCIENCE OF THE CROSS, by Edith Stein, Reg- nery, $4.75. (Reviewed by Flannery O'Connor) This book is, a presentation of the life and doctrine of St. John of the Cross by Edith Stein, a Jewish Carmelite nun who met her death in the gas chambers at Auschwitz. It is her last work and knowing the outcome of her life, one feels in it the modern fulfillment of St. John’s doctrine by herself. As for St. John of the Cross, his life was lived so very near eternal realities that it seems an impossible life to under stand. One must simply accept it on faith with no recourse to psychology. Edith Stein was at one time the disciple of the phenomenologist, Edmund Husserl. Her intellectual train ing was not in theology but in philosophy of the phenomen ologist school. Both the trans lator and the editor of this book point out that this back ground makes a difference in Edith Stein’s approach to St. John, but the reader who looks for the difference will perhaps find it in very few instances. The book seems largely made up of quotations from St. John which Edith Stein adds very little to. It is a moving book but less for what is in it than for Edith Stein’s own background — for the modern crucifixion that the reader knows was waiting for her as she wrote the book. BACK TO JESUS, by FiESM at Your Grocers! COLONIAL BAKING COMPANY AUGUSTA, GEORGIA LILY - TULIP CUP CORPORATION 1550 WRIGHTSBORO ROAD AUGUSTA, GEORGIA Jacques Leclercq, Kenedy, $3.95. (Reviewed by Leo J. Zuber) If the title of this volume sounds or seems to be a bit indefinite, the subtitle, Chris tian Morality and Modern Life, may hone it up a bit. It is a translation from the French, Le Reiour a Jesus, of a scholarly volume by a scholarly, but eminently prac tical, writer, a professor at the University of Louvain. This is not less than the fourth trans lation into English of a much larger series of his works. The volume is to be nibbled at slowly, thoughtfully, and should be masticated at equi valent pace. Digestion is an other matter. The author has much substance to offer and no one is likely to get it all the first time around. His cnapters are as retreat discourses — but not for the casually inclined retreatant. They cover such topics as Christianity as a religion, the question of God, the Christian view of the world and of man, that trinity of virtues, Faith, Hope, and Charity, and con cludes with some comments on contemplation. Any real layman aspires to an increase in knowledge of these topics; possibly a quote from the Leclercq volume will impel laymen to this reading: “Since nearly all works of spirituality are written for re ligious, it follows that they treat of virtues proper to the religious life and leave aside those proper to life in the world.” This book Is written around the cornerstone of “life in the world” where saints are un doubtedly far more numerous than one might at first suspect. The Leclercq volume is a strong arm offered in aid to a still further increase in that number. THE IRISH STORY, a sur vey of Irish history and cul ture, by Alice Curtayne, Kene dy, $3.95. (Reviewed by Leo J. Zuber) There’s a timely as well as a durable quality about The Iriss Siory, Where in this country is there not a warm feeing about Ireland and the Irisi? Could there possibly be moie humor, more stories and iofcs, than there are about the Irisi? But our Irish lore and background are too often of the John McCormack—Mother Madiree and annual St. Pat ricks Day parade variety, a bit of sentimental nostalgia wittout too much basis in harl knowledge. . Ir The Irish Story, Alice Curayne gives us some real sampling of the substance of Iris! history. An appalling recognition forces itself on us: how very precious little of this story did we ever hear or read or know before. What a mar vel that we generally think so yell of Ireland having known her so inadequately. There in lies the timely as well as the durable quality of the volume. Compressing the story of a people from 3,500 B. C. to the 20th century A. D. was the author’s task. This is not scholarly history; nor is it light reading. Anyone who makes serious claims of Irish ancestory or other pro-Irish leanings owes himself this book. There is a series of excellent pictures, a restrained bibliog raphy, and an index; pity it is that such a volume goes out in public without a map! Speaking of the fighting Irish, the outstanding picture is of the Cuchulain statue in Dub lin’s General Post Office. And, credit where it is due, it is interesting to learn that Cath olics under persecution in Ire land had some company in the Presbyterians. BEAT ON A DAMASK DRUM, by T. K. Martin, Dut ton, $3.75. (Reviewed by Flannery O'Connor) This is a very well-written war novel with religious un dertones. It traces the penetra tion into reality of a film ac tress who insinuates herself into the hide-out of five sol diers of fortune in French Indo China. Her intention is to retrieve one of them, a child hood companion, and bring him back to London to live her kind of life, a kind of life which he and all those who have experienced the horror of modern war and the pre cariousness of modern life have out-grown. In the process of trying to get him back, she learns the lesson of Christ’s final abandonment on the cross. Occasionally meaning in this book is lost in shadows' and credibility strained, but in general it is a novel well worth reading once and possi bly twice. MATHEW CAREY. PAM PHLETEER FOR FREEDOM, by Jane F. Hindman, Kenedy, $2.50. PADRE KINO, AND THE TRAIL TO THE PACIFIC, by Jack Steffan, Kenedy $2.50. (Reviewed by Leo J. Zuber) P. J. Kenedy and Sons pub lishes what is growing to be an impressive series of books for young folks, 10 to 15 years of age, Catholic and otherwise. Generally entitled American Background Books, individual ly they deal with Catholic men and women who have played significant historic roles in the development of the North American continent. The pres ent volumes are respectively the 13th and 14th in the series. The author of the Carey volume is a Philadelphian, currently Assistant Librarian at Holy Family College. Her subject, Mathew Carey, Dub lin born and reared, as a boy apprentice to a hard-drinking man of the trade, learned the rudiments of printing and pub lishing. Living in Ireland un der conditions imposed by the Penal Laws aroused fire and rebellion which promptly got him jailed. Later, he went to France where he learned more of his now chosen trade and where he became personally acquainted with Franklin and Lafayette. Later still (1784) he migrated to Philadelphia where he lived the remainder of his life. His life span in America, 1784-1839, put him here in a key city in a critical time, particularly with his temperament and his Ireland experience under the Penal Laws. These were trying years between the Declaration of Independence (1776) and the adoption of the U. S. Constitu tion (1787). As printer, pub lisher, pamphleteer, and friend of the great of his day, Carey exercised great influence even among the infliiential. He numbered Washington, Henry Clay, Father John Carroll (Georgetown University’s founder), Hamilton and Jef ferson among his acquaint ances. Not the least of his claims to fame is his having published the first Bible in this country. The Padre Kino volume might be labelled a walking book; it was that good mis sionary’s apostolate to care for territory scattered over an area now comprising Western Mexico and Southwestern United States. The land was unsettled, resources largely undeveloped and largely un recognized. Kino, born in the Tyrol and educated as a Jesuit in Spain, was, in addition to being a priest, a cartographer and a mathematician. His ex plorations proved that Califor nia was not an island and that Lower California was a penin sula. He introduced agriculture with cattle, horses and sheep into his territory; he taught the value of good seed and of husbandry. More than that, he brought the Catholic faith and thereby implanted a spiritual tradition strong to this day. SMITH SHOE REPAIR DANIEL VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER AUGUSTA, GA. Best Wishes Richmond Concrete Products Co., Inc. P. 0. BOX 3306 HILL STATION AUGUSTA, GEORGIA (f3eit %Uidi e3 of RICHMOND COUNTY BANK MEMBER F. D. I. C. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA Authentic College Clothes In New Olive Tones A , SUITS WITH VESTS. Beautifully blended i olive tones add a new fashion note to these ’natural shoulder suits featuring the tradi- i tional 6-button vest, faultlessly cut to insure a smooth, clean-line appearance. 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