Newspaper Page Text
Serving
Georgia's 88
Southern Counties
s Vol. 41, No. 17
Bishop McDonough Asks
Parents 9 Protest Against
Certain Movie “Trailers”
4
t
t
BRUNSWICK — Most Rev
erend Thomas J. McDonough,
Bishop of Savannah, has urg
ed members of the Savannah
Deanery Council of Catholic
Women and members of par
ish Home and School Associa
tions to protest against the low
moral tone of motion picture
“trailers” advertising coming
attractions.
Speaking to the quarterly
meeting of the Savannah
Deanery, at Saint Francis
Xavier Church, Brunswick,
Ga., Bishop McDonough noted
that the villigance of parents
who carefully select proper
film fare for their children is
being frustrated by the show
ing of morally objectionable
advertising “trailers” to chil
dren attending films generally
accepted as family entertain
ment. He also noted that some
of the advertising “trailers”
are being shown by some tel
evision stations.
A resolution was later
adopted urging all members to
begin a campaign of letter
writing to motion picture ex
hibitors and television stations
asking that the practice be
stopped.
Bishop McDonough praised
the work of Deanery members
and others who have “contrib
uted greatly” to the welfare of
the Carmelite convent at Sav
annah through the Carmel
Club. Also commended, for the
“wonderful way in which they
have undertaken many per
sonal sacrifices to forward
much needed diocesan work,”
were members of the St. John
Vianey Seminary Club and
and the St. Mary’s Home
Guild.
Hosts for the Deanery meet
ing was the Rev. James Cum
mings, S.M., pastor of Saint
Francis Xavier parish. The
Very Rev. Joseph Buckley,
S.M., provincial of the Farist
Fathers, was an honored guest.
More than 100 members rep
resenting parishes from all
over the Savannah Deanery,
were welcomed by Mrs. Peter
Vivianzio, St. Francis Xavier
council president and chair
man of the Diocesan Family
and Parent committee of the
D.C.C.W.
Mrs. Edwin Mulligan, Dio
cesan Council president, re
ported on the activities of the
National Council Convention
held last October in Las Vegas,
Nevada.
A nominating committee
was appointed to prepare a
slate of nominees for presen
tation at the March meeting in
Savannah. New Deanery offi
cers will be elected then.
The meeting closed with
benediction of the Most Bless
ed Sacrament.
CASTRO
■in i n mu tut 1
Strangling Catholic
Education In Cuba
By Marjorie L. Fillyaw
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
MIAMI, Fla., — Catholic
education is being strangled
in Cuba under the regime of
Fidel Castro, while land re
form measures are affecting
the work of the Church and
the lives of Religious, accord
ing to groups of nuns who re
turned to the U S.. from the
island.
All U. S. citizens, the nuns
were among hundreds of
Americans and Cuban exiles
fd who arrived at Miami’s Inter
national Airport after the
break in U. S.-Cuba diplomatic
relations.
The nuns were recalled by
their superiors in the U. S.
‘ following President Eisenhow
er’s January 3 announcement
of the break. All are veterans
of from 25 to 45 years of serv
ice in Cuba.
After hours of waiting for
seats on Miami bound planes
which were running hours be
hind schedule, the Sisters left
Havana’s airport amid tearful
goodbyes from Cubans who
begged them to “tell the
American people that we love
them.” The nuns brought with
them scores of messages for
relatives of Cuban families
who months ago fled Cuba
and are now in the south
Florida area.
Enrollment in Cuba’s Cath
olic schools, most of which are
privately operated by reli
gious communities, has been
decreased by more than half,
the Sisters estimated. This is
due, they said, to land seizures
which depleted the income of
Cuban families who, in turn
have left the island for tne
U. S., Spain and Mexico. Re
gardless of the drop in the
number of pupils, the institu
tions are not permitted to dis
charge any lay employees,
even those admittedly pro-
Castro.
The nuns said that the Sec
ond Order of Dominicans, all
of whom are Spanish Sisters,
have been forced to leave the
enclosure of their cloister
since all of their income prop
erty except the house in which
they live has been seized. With
no other source of sustenance,
the usually cloistered Sisters
must depend on the gratitu-
ties. A home for the aged op
erated by the Little Sisters
of the Poor is occupied by
some 500 persons for which
the government allows the
sum of $600 per month.
All school age children, for
merly cared for by Sisters of
Charity in a government or
phanage known as Beneficen-
cia, have been transferred to
a large building at Ceiba de
Agua, on the outskirts of.
Havana. There they are in
structed by government teach
ers. The Sisters go out daily
to cook for them, returning
in the evening to the orphan
age where babies are still un
der their care.
According to the Sisters the
educational reforms program
expected to go into effect this
year will make it mandatory
for everyone to declare wheth
er or not he is in favor of the
present government. The of
ficial newspaper Revolucion
has already branded as coun
ter - revolutionaries anyone
v/ho aids the Cuban refugees,
the nuns said, and Premier
Castro himself has reiterated
that anyone opposed to com
munism is to be considered
anti-revolutionary.
In the last few months, there
has been a marked increase
in the number of Cubans, par
ticularly men, who assist at
Mass and attend devotions in
the churches, the Sisters said.
The day before they left
Havana, large groups of wom
en in the militia were station
ed on the roof of the Francis
can monastery adjoining the
Church of St. Francis and out
side of the church itself, the
nuns said. In addition the
women soldiers were occupy
ing living quarters usually
used by the priests.
The Sisters pointed out that
the salaries of men and wom
en in the militia must still be
paid by the employers for
whom they work. Teenagers
now in military training camps
are not permitted to visit their
homes and no provision is
made for their religious duties,
the nuns said. •
“Girl in Boom
13” Condemned
NEW YORK (NC) — “The
Girl In Room 13” has been
placed in the condemned class
by the National Legion of De
cency.
The legion explained that
the Layton-produced movie
was evaluated in Class C be
cause “the low moral tone
which pervades the develop
ment of the theme of this film
is further compounded by
highly indecent and salacious
treatment in costuming, danc
ing and situations.”
DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH EDITION
MONROE, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1961
Published By The
Cat-holic Laymen's
Ass'n of Georgia
10c Per Copy — $3 a Year
INAUGURATION BIBLE
Shown here is the Kennedy
family Bible, on which Presi
dent-elect John F. Kennedy
took his oath of office yester
day. The Bible, which con
tains a record of births, en
gagements, marriages, and
deaths in the Fitzgerald and
Kennedy families, is the first
Douay version ever used in a
Presidential inauguration.
(NC Photos)
On Inauguration Day
AMERICANS ASKED TO PRAY
FOR BLESSINGS FROM GOD
WASHINGTON, (NC) —
Americans are asked to offer
special prayers on Inaugura
tion Day for God’s guidance
of the United States and the
new President.
The appeal comes from a
group of religious leaders of
the nation’s capital who form
the Religious Observance Sub
committee of the Inaugural
Committee.
John F. Kennedy will take
the oath of office as President
in front of the U. S. Capitol on
January 20.
Archbishop Patrick A. O’
Boyle of Washington repre
sents the Catholic Church on
the religious observance unit
which plans a lengthy state
ment before the inauguration.
Other members are Rabbi
Joseph M. Brandriss, presi
dent, Washington Board of
Rabbis; Episcopal Bishop An
gus Dun of Washington; Rabbi
Norman Gertenfeld; Methodist
Bishop John Wesley Lord of
Washington; Dr. Clarence T.
Nelson, president, National
Capital Area Council of
Churches; Dr. E. C. Smith,
vice president of the Council
of Churches and Rev. John T.
Tavlarides, acting dean, St.
Sophia Cathedral.
Missions Planned
By Four Parishes
ALBANY — Missions are
scheduled for four churches in
this area the last of this
month.
Conducting the missions will
be the Rav. Blaise Scannell,
O.F.M., assistant director of
the Franciscan Mission Band
in the east.
During the week of January
21st, missions will be conduct
ed at St. Theresa’s in Cordele
and St. Michael’s in Montezu
ma. Father Scannell then
moves to St. Clare’s, Albany,
for a Mission beginning Jan
uary 29th at the noon day
Mass. It will continue through
the 31st, closing with an eve
ning Mass at 8 o’clock.
Little St. Jerome’s Chapel in
Americus, smallest mission in
the Diocese, will open its mis
sion on Wednesday, February
1st, and conclude February
3rd, with a First Friday Holy
Hour at 8 o’clock.
Father Martin B a n g e r t,
O.F.M., who is in charge of St.
Clare’s and St. Jerome’s, told
The Bulletin office, “Since a
mission is rather uncommon in
these parts, we ask your read
ers to please pray for its suc
cess.” It is hoped that the Mis
sion will attract non-Catholics
of the area,” Father said, “but
the mission is primarily direct
ed to bring back those who
have strayed away and to in
crease the fervor and the prac
tice of our Catholic Faith.”
Book Reviews 6
Editorial Comment 4
Marriage Notices 3
Obituaries 2
Question Box 4
Doris Answers Youth 6
Confirm 151
At Savannah
SAVANNAH — In ceremon
ies held at the Cathedral of St.
John the Baptist, here and at
Our Lady of Lourdes Church,
Pt. Wentworth, 151 children
and adults received the sac
rament of confirmation last
week.
Bishop Thomas J. McDon
ough conferred the sacrament
on 82 children and 37 adults
at the Cathedral on Sunday,
Jan. 8th. Besides parents,
friends and the Sisters of Mer
cy, who teach at the Cathedral
school, 30 priests were in at
tendance.
The pathedral ceremony
closed with solemn pontifical
benediction, at which the Rt.
Rev. Msgr. T. James McNa
mara, P.A., rector of the cathe
dral and Vicar General of the
Diocese, was celebrant.
Rev. Pirot Fiero, assistant
pastor of St. James, was dea
con. The Rev. Edward Frank,
assistant pastor of Blessed Sac
rament, was sub-deacon.
The smaller class of nine
boys and 15 girls was confirm
ed at Our Lady of Lourdes, to
gether with eight adults on
Monday, January 9th.
Very Rev. Bede Lightner,
O.S.B., and Rev. Brendan
Dooley, O.S.B., served as chap
lains to the Bishop. Also as
sisting at the ceremonies were
the Rev. Timothy J. O’Dwyer,
S.M.A., principal of St. Pius X
High School, Rev. Robert J.
Teoli, assistant rector of the
Cathedral and the Rev. Fran
cis J. Donohue, pastor of Our
Lady of Lourdes, Rt. Rev.
Msgr. Andrew J. McDonald,
chancellor of the Diocese, was
master of ceremonies.
Bishop McDonough intero-
gated the children of both par
ishes and exhorted them to
“the greatest fervor in the fre
quent reception of the sacra
ments of Penance and Holy
Eucharist.” He also urged the
parents to make greater efforts
to attend daily Mass and spe
cial parochial devotions.
Chariayne Hkniter:
"Madonna Is Permanent
Fixture Of
(Special To
ATLANTA—“The Madonna is a perma
nent fixture of my room.” This is how
Chariayne Hunter described the Statue of
the Blessed Virgin she clutched as she was
sped away from the campus, following
suspension from the University of Georgia.
The Madonna drew attention to Char-
layne’s faith as it appeared in pictures
widely circulated throughout this state and
the nation.
Chariayne, along with Hamilton E.
Holmes, are the first Negroes to be admitted
by the University of Georgia, oldest char
tered state university in the nation.
A convert to .the Catholic faith, and
parishioner of St. Paul of the Cross Church
here, Miss Hunter said the Statue was a gift
from the Sisters at St. Paul of the Cross.
“It has always meant a great deal to me,”
she said. “I took it with me when I went
to Wayne University, in Detroit. When I en-
My Room"
he Bulletin)
rolled at Georgia, the Madonna naturally
went with me.”
Miss Hunter’s rosary was always with
her during her first trying days at the Uni
versity. “It was a great consolation,” she
said.
Georgia’s Newman Club received praise
from Chariayne. Girls from the group
sought her out and were a “bright spot for
rne.” Rev. Cronan Kelly, director of the
Newman Club, visited her, telling her that
Mass at the Club was offered for her on last
Tuesday morning, her first day at the Uni
versity.
Rev. Edward J. Banks, C.P., of St. Paul
of the Cross parish, describes Miss Hunter
as always being active in church affairs
since her conversion in December of 1958.
She was particularly active in CYO activi
ties.
Problem Of Obscenity
Receives Attention As
87th Congress Opens
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
WASHINGTON — Congress
men have taken up the cudgels
against obscene literature
again.
The early days of the 87th
Congress saw introduction of
a number of bills intended to
deal in various ways with the
problem of obscenity.
Basically, two proposals are
involved:
1) Establishment of a com
mission to investigate the
smut racket and make propos
als for coping with it.
2) Amendment of Federal
laws dealing with pornogra
phy mailed to minors to speci
fy that a broader norm of ob
scenity be applied in these
cases than is used when adults
are involved.
The proposal to set up a
commission on obscenity is not
a newcomer' to Capitol Hill.
Several bills for this purpose
were introduced in the 86th
Congress. The Senate approv
ed the measure, but the House
did not take final action on it.
The new versions of the pro
posal, like the old, call for es
tablishing a group to be called
the Commission on Noxious
and Obscene Matters and Ma
terials.
The commission would be
made up of members of Con
gress, Federal officials, clergy
men, publishing and entertain
ment industry representatives,
and state and local law en
forcement officials. The group
would hold hearings and con-
A. A- v5.\X 1 A .V . A . f A A
PRAY FOR OUR |
(PRIESTLY DEAD |
REV. HENRY SCHLENKE
January 23, 1928
RT. REV. MSGR.
JAMES A. KANE
January 29, 1939
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. Through Christ Our
Lord. Amen.
Expect
Meeting
Observers
LONDON, (NC) — Official
observers from the Catholic
Church are “confidently” ex
pected to attend the third as
sembly of the World Council
of Churches at the end of this
year in India, a Protestant
spokesman said here.
The Rev. Kenneth Slack,
general secretary of the Brit
ish Council of Churches, said
at a press conference that ob
servers from the Russian Or
thodox Church are also ex
pected. The assembly — first
to be held in Asia — takes
place in New Delhi from No
vember 18 to December 8. Nei
ther the Catholic Church nor
the Russian Orthodox Church
are members of the council,
though the Greek Orthodox
Church is.
Both Catholic and Russian
Orthodox observers attended
the assembly of the British
Council of Churches last year
at St. Andrews, Scotland, but
to do so at the assembly of
the World Council would be a
new step.
Some 600 official delegates
from 178 Christian groups will
go to the New Delhi conven
tion. This is 31 denominations
more than attended the first
assembly at Amsterdam in
1948. The delegation of 16 from
(Continued on Page 8)
duct investigations on obsceni
ty. It would report its findings
and suggestions to the Presi
dent and Congress.
Senate cosponsors of the
measure (S. 62) are Sens. Karl
E. Mundt of South Dakota,
John J. Sparkman of Alabama,
and Gordon Allott of Colorado.
In the House the sponsors of
the proposal (H.R. 417, 1826
and 2468) include Reps. Carroll
D. Kearns of Pennsylvania,
Gordon H. Scherer of Ohio
and Glenn Cunningham of
Nebraska.
Companion bills have been
introduced in the House (H.R.
2425 and 2426) to broaden the
definition of obscenity in cas
es involving pornography sent
to minors under 19. Their
sponsors are Reps. Kathryn E.
Granahan of Pennsylvania and
George M. Wallhauser of New
Jersey.
Their proposal is intended
to make it easier to win con
victions of mail order opera
tors who send obscene ma
terials to minors. Their bills
would amend the Federal law
on mail order smut by specify
ing that' a different, broader
norm of obscenity be applied
when the pornography is sent
to minors than is used when
it goes to adults.
The idea is that minors are
psychologically more suscepti
ble to suggestive material than
adults, and therefore what is
not legally obscene for an ad
ult might be highly objection
able if it fell into the hands of
$440,000 Granted
AUGUSTA — A federal
grant of $440,000 will help St.
Joseph’s Hospital finance its
$1 million expansion program..
The Catholic hospital was
among five Georgia hospitals
to which grants totaling $1,-
900,572 were made by the De
partment of Health, Education
and Welfare from funds al
lotted under the Hill-Burton
Act.
The money allotted to St.
Joseph’s will be matched by
$250,000 from public contribu
tions plus $250,000 to be pro-
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
SAN FRANCISCO — Almost
within hailing distance of one
of Soviet Russia’s prime propa
ganda mills for Latin America,
an American nun is working
to stem the Red tide. Her
weapon: Christian education.
Mother Genevieve McCloin
is president of two-year-old
Carrasco College of the Sacred
Heart in Montevideo, Uruguay.
It is the only Catholic wom
en’s college in that country
and the first patterned on
North American lines. The
college is conducted by the
Religious of the Sacred Heart.
The classes are conducted
in English. “Some families
aren’t interested in Christian
atmosphere, but they want
their daughters to learn Eng
lish,” she explained.
Mother McCloin describes
Carrasco as “an attempt to im
plant Christian principles and
culture in the future mothers”
of a nation heavily penetrated
by many years of secularism
in government and the press.
Given this friendly climate
in which to take root, com
munism looms large in the
Uruguayan picture, she added.
“The party is officially rec
ognized, but more than that
the Soviet embassy is the
busiest and most heavily staff
ed of any in Montevideo. It
has some 70 employees, where
most embassies have four or
a minor. The Granahan-Wall-
hauser proposal aims to give
this distinction the status of
law.
Their bills set a maximum
first offense penalty for mail
ing smut to a minor of a $5,000
fine or five years in jail or
both. For offenses after the
first, the minimum penalty is
five years or $5,000 or both,
while the maximum penalty is
10 years or $10,000 or both. .
The new anti-obscenity pro
posals fit into a recent pattern
of growing congressional con
cern over the smut problem. In
the last few years many hear
ings and investigations have
been conducted on the racket,
and many pieces of legislation
have been proposed and enact
ed.
President Eisenhower last
July signed into law two new
measures aimed at strengthen
ing the Post Office Depart
ment’s power to deal with por
nography in the mails.
One authorizes the depart
ment to seek a court order im
pounding mail sent to persons
believed to be distributing ob
scene matter, pending a de
partment hearing on the case.
The other gives statutory
status to the position of Post
Office judicial officer — the
man who usually hands down
the final decision within the
department on obscenity cases.
Both measures were origi
nally introduced by Rep. Gran
ahan, who is chairman of a
House postal subcommittee.
vided by the Sisters of St. Jos
eph of Carondolet.
The expansion program will
add 26 new beds for surgical
patients and 25 beds for med
ical patients, increasing the
hospital’s capacity to 160 beds.
To date the local drive has
netted approximately $200,000.
Construction on the new
three-story wing should begin
around April 1st.
Kuhlke and Wade, local ar
chitects, are drawing plans for
the addition. They should be
completed late next month.
five,” she said.
“And it’s pretty well known
as the headquarters for dis
semination of Red propaganda
in Latin America, especially
Argentina and Brazil. The em
bassy receives about 65,000
pounds of mail every month
from Moscow.”
Mother McCloin said Monte
video can count on seven or
eight general strikes a year
“inspired by the Reds.”
Evening Of
Recollection
At Augusta
AUGUSTA — An evening
of recollection will be held
Friday night, January 27th at
St. Mary’s-on-the-Hill Church.
The Rev. Felix Donnelly,
pastor of the Nativity of Our
Lord Church, Thunderbolt,
will conduct the exercises con
sisting of three conferences
ending with Benediction of the
Most Blessed Sacrament and
renewal of marriage vows.
Theme of the program, spon
sored by the Augusta Deanery
Council of Catholic Women,
will be “Sanctification
Through Marriage.”
Hill-Burton Funds
For St. Joseph's
Nun Works In Shadow
Of Propaganda Mill