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DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH EDITION
Serving
Georgia's 88
Southern Counties
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH
Published By The
Cat-holic Laymen's
Ass'n of Georgia
Vol. 41, No. 23
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 15, 1961
10c Per Copy — $3 A Year
NEW SHRINE OF OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS
A model of the new and unusual outdoor Shrine of Our Lady of the Snows, Belleville, Ill.,
shows the traditional canopy of ciborium over the high altar sweeping upward in the
form of a three-dimensional “M” for Mary, the shrine’s patroness. Beneath the spire and
set within a chalice will be a figure of Our Lady of the Snows, sculpted by William
Severson of Clayton, Mo. The shrine, administered by the Oblate Fathers of Mary Im
maculate, will be completed in August. The high altar will be centered in an amphi
theater seating 20,000 persons. (NC Photos)
Rabbi Appeals For
Parochial School Aid
CHICAGO (NC) — An ap
peal to the American public to
support the request for Gov
ernment aid to parochial
schools of all levels was made
here by a Jewish Rabbi.
Rabbi Solomon Rabinowitz
told the men’s club of the Con
gregation Beth Jacob in sub
urban Scottsdale: “When we
support integration in public
schools, we are actually moti
vated by a moral conviction.
We are against a segregated
educational system by which
colored children are considered
second class students. If col
ored parents want their chil
dren to mingle with whites,
the American Government
senses its moral obligation to
support their wish.
“Why, then,” the Rabbi ask
ed, “does the same American
Government deny its support
to parents who want their chil
dren to mingle with their great
spiritual heritage? How can
the great American communi
ty say to millions of children
who study in parochial
schools: ‘Because you are in
doctrinated with faith in God,
we will not support even your
secular instruction?’ Didn’t we
select in 1960 a God-indoctri
nated man in the White
House?”
Rabbi Rabinowitz suggested
that the American nation "give
up its discrimination against
God-loving parents and chil
dren. The only ones who ben
efit from denying government
aid to religious schools are the
leftists.
“Let us all — including Con
gressmen and judges — realize
that the synagogue and the
church can and will make bet
ter American citizens and a
better American state,” he de
clared.
National Library Week
m April 16-22,1961
Reading enriches the mind,
satisfies the spirit, increases
knowledge, stirs the imagi
nation. During National Li
brary Week — and through
out the year — use and
support your library! Build
your own home library. "For
a fuller, richer life-Read!"
Silver Tea
At Savannah
SAVANNAH — Blessed Sac
rament parish will hold its
annual Silver Tea on Sunday,
April 23rd at the Convent on
Victory Drive.
Afternoon hours will be
from 4 to 5:30 p. m. Evening
hours from 7 to 9 p. m.
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thomas A.
Brennan, pastor, has named
Mrs. Thomas J. Mahoney to
serve as general chairman. All
parish organizations will par
ticipate.
THEME: "THAT ALL MAY BE ONE'
Rev. Placid Jordan
To Address Convention
ALBANY — This city will
be host to the annual conven
tion of the Diocesan Council of
Catholic Women April 15 and
16. Registration begins at noon
Saturday, April 15th, at Ra
dium Springs Casino, the first
general session beginning at
2:30 p. m.
Theme of this year’s conven
tion is “That All May Be
One,” with the meeting’s annu
al workshop scheduled for 3:30
p. m., Saturday. Workshop
chairman is Mrs. R. E. Stradt-
man of Savannah. During Sat
urday afternoon there will be
a coffee get-together sponsored
by the Albany Council.
On Saturday evening the
annual banquet will be held at
Radium Springs, starting at
7:30 p. m. Speaker will be the
Rev. Placid Jordan, O.S.B.,
distinguished foreign corre
spondent, author and lecturer.
As a foreign correspondent
Father Placid has explored
many countries of the world;
but more importantly, as a
thinker he has explored the
minds and hearts of the great
philosophers and theologians.
Born of German Lutheran par
ents, he studied at Frankfort
University, and later, while en
gaged in research for his
Ph.D. at Jena, he was to have
his first taste of Catholic the
ology and philosophy, to be
followed by a period of intens
ive study and endless discus
sions.
Finally, while vacationing at
the famed Benedictine mona
stery, Beuron, one of the
monks said simply: “After all,
my friend, you’ve got to jump
into the water if you want to
learn to swim.” This was the
final nudge across the thresh
old, and he was received into
the Church on Good Friday,
1924.
He was ordained on the
Feast of the Immaculate Con
ception in 1951, and on the
third anniversary of his ordi
nation, Father Jordan climax
ed his spiritual journey with
his profession as a member of
the Benedictine Order in the
chapter room of the Abbey at
Beuron.
Delegates will attend Mass
at St. Teresa’s Church at 8:30
a. m. on Sunday, and following
the Mass in the school audi
torium a continental breakfast
will be served with the compli
ments of St. Teresa’s Altar So
ciety and the Knights of Col
umbus. There will be a Sunday
morning meeting of delegates
at 10:30 in the school auditori
um, and the luncheon meeting
will start at 1 p. m. at Radium
Casino.
Luncheon speaker will be
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Daniel J.
Bourke, V.F., pastor of St.
Mary’s on-the-hill, Augusta.
Msgr. Bourke returns to speak
in a city where he served for
many years as pastor of St.
Teresa parish. Monsignor
Bourke has chosen “Family
Life and Vocations” as the
subject of his address.
Mrs. J. E. Mulligan, Thun
derbolt, president of the Dio
cesan Council, will preside at
the general sessions. Spiritual
moderator of the Diocesan
Council is the Rt. Rev. Msgr.
John D. Toomey, pastor of St.
James Church, Savannah.
Mrs. J. R. Pinkston of Al
bany is convention chairman.
Serving with Mr. Pinkston as
co-chairmen are Mrs. L. E.
Mock and Mrs. R. E. McCor
mack, Sr.
New Violence Strikes Church
In Congo's Maniema District
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
LEOPOLDVILLE, The Con
go — Violence against mission
aries has erupted again in
southern Kivu province, which
is occupied by Lumubist troops
and terrorized by roving bands
of armed civilians.
It reached a new peak in the
middle of March, when 30 mis
sionaries in the town of Kasan-
go were hauled to the en
campment of a Moslem Lu-
mumbist band where they
were slapped repeatedly and
smeared with charcoal and
flour. They were saved from
execution by the intervention
of an official of the provincial
capital of Kivu, who paid a
ransom for them.
This crisis came (March
14-15) a month after mission
aries in southern Kivu — a
C.Y.0. Centennial Cotillion
(By Mrs. Elaine Syme)
MACON — Through the ma
gic of imagination, enthusiasm
and hard work, the CYO mem
bers of St. Joseph Church in
Macon will enjoy a personal
glimpse into an elegant period
of Southern history.
On Friday evening, April
14th, CYO members and their
guests will attend the Centen
nial Cotillion, everyone wear
ing costumes of the period.
From the moment of their
arrival, they will find the en
tire social hall of St. Joseph
Church has been transfored
into an ante-bellum mansion.
A canopy, leading from the
street to the entrance, will
strike the first not of elegance
and formality. The foyer,
lighted by a chandelier and an
tique lamps, will be furnished
with antique chairs, table and
mirror, to carry out the atmo
sphere of a lovely home.
The ballroom will be ablaze
with the light of three large
chandeliers, hanging baskets of
flowers and ivy will decorate
the walls, a profusion of flo
wers and magnolia leaves will
be used throughout the room
and palms will border the
areas to be used for the buffet
table and the orchestra.
A beautifully appointed buf
fet table laden with sandwich
es, cakes and bowls of punch
will be located on one side of
the ballroom. On the other
side, the orchestra under the
direction of Robert Huelle-
meier will provide music for
dancing.
The stage at the far end of
the ballroom will be converted
into a large veranda with
white columns and porch rail
ings; porch rockers from which
to enjoy a view of the coun
tryside (a backdrop beautifully
painted by a group of CYO
members) will add to the at
mosphere.
Committee chairmen, mem
bers and many volunteers have
been planning and working for
two months to complete the
transformation, all of the dec
orations including the chande
liers, having been made by
them.
Father John J. Fitzpatrick,
moderator, comments that the
Centennial Cotillion is the
most anxiously-awaited event
ever sponsored by the CYO of
Macon. It will be an evening
to remember.
region known as the Maniema
— were brought to Kasongo
and imprisoned, beaten and
humiliated. Nuns were among
them.
During the month following
this first peak of violence the
missioners were subjected to
threats from armed bands, and
to repeated visits from police
commissioners (real or impos
tors). Some were hauled before
people’s tribunals and treated
as common thieves or liars.
Illiterate Moslems calling
themselves police commission
ers held guns on diocesan au
thorities at Kindu and forced
them to empty the diocesan
strong-box. They took all the
diocesan reserves, amounting
to about $5,000.
As in other parts of the Con
go, roving groups of armed
civilians loyal to the ultrana
tionalist ideas of the late Pre
mier Patrice Lumumba have
(Continued on Page 8)
Bishop Thomas J. McDonough
To Preside
Rev. Placid Jordan. O.S.B.
Banquet Speaker
Mrs. J. E. Mulligan
Diocesan President
Msgr. John D. Toomey
Spiritual Moderator
SISTER MARY CLARE, R.S.M.
MARKS GOLDEN JUBILEE
MACON — On March 25, at
Mt. de Sales, Macon, Sister
Mary Clare Daly, R.S.M., cele
brated privately the fiftieth
anniversary of her profession.
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thomas I.
Sheehan pastor of St. Joseph
Church, Macon, offered a low
Mass in the Convent chapel
where fifty years before, Sis
ter Mary Clare had been the
first to pronounce her vows.
On Saturday, April 8, Rt.
Rev. Msgr. Thomas A. Brennan,
pastor of Blessed Sacrament
Church, Savannah, offered the
Holy Sacrifice of the Mass
which inaugurated the formal
celebration of Sister’s golden
jubilee.
For the past fifty years Sis
ter Mary Clare has labored in
Georgia, teaching instrumental
and choral music at Mt. de
GLIMPSE INTO SOUTHERN HISTORY — St. Joseph’s Catholic Youth Organiza
tion will sponsor a Centennial Cotillion this Friday evening. Posing in dress of 1861 are:
Cathy Sheridan, Hickory Schipis, Nancy Jenkins, Dickie Lamb and Phyllis Sheridan.-—
(Drinnon Photo)
Sales and at St. Joseph School,
Macon, and at St. Jospeh
School, Columbus, Georgia.
For many years Sister also
taught religious vacation
school at Albany and other
Georgia missions.
Msgr. Daniel J. Bourke
Luncheon Speaker
St. John’s
Student Wins
Spelling Bee
VALDOSTA — Andy Ash
ley, 13, a seventh grade stu
dent at St. John’s School out-
spelled 59 competitors to win
the Lowndes County Spelling
Bee.
The local competition was
sponsored by the Atlanta
Newspapers Inc. and as part
the Atlanta Journal spelling
bee.
Young Ashley, the son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Ashley,
1102 Dellwood Dr. will now
represent the county in the
district spelldown at Waycross,
April 17.
Adoration Day
WASHINGTON (NC) — An
estimated five million U. S.
Catholic youngsters will kneel
before the Blessed Sacrament
on Youth Adoration Day, May
21, according to Msgr. Joseph
E. Schieder, director of the
Youth Department, National
Catholic Welfare Conference.
Parenthood Most Demanding,
Challenging Of All Careers
CINCINNATI (NC) — Par
enthood is “the most challeng
ing career, and the most de
manding,” a theologian told
several hundred mothers here.
It can be lived successfully
“only if you understand that
it is a vocation, a call by God,”
Father John J. Wenzel, S.J.,
director of Xavier University’s
family life institute, asserted.
It is the responsibility of
parents to prepare their chil
dren “to be citizens of two
worlds — the secular world
and the heavenly,” the priest,
who is head of the university’s
theology department, told the
Federation of Catholic Parent-
Teacher Associations.
Some of the essential ingre
dients in shaping a child’s per
sonality for the dual citizen
ship are “ a sense of discipline,
a sense of obedience and a
sense of control,” Father Wen
zel said. All these can be
I
Editorial Comment
Book Reviews
Backdrop 4
Obituaries 2
View From the Rectory 4
Pope's Easter Message 2
Doris Answers Youth
taught “most effectively” by
the parents and “if these les
sons are not learned at home,
it is an idle dream to suppose
they will be acquired any
where else,” he said.
A child must be taught re
sponsibility from his earliest
days, the theologian said. He
added: “A person doesn’t sud
denly acquire a sense of re
sponsibility at age 18 or 20 or
24.” Some parents are unreal
istic in teaching responsibility,
he continued. It must “be
taught gradually, over and
over, taking into account the
child’s age and capacity, and
the responsibility must be in
creased gradually as awareness
and capacity increase,” he de
tailed.
“A child also needs a sense
of direction,” Father Wenzel
said. “He must know the mean
ing of life as a prelude to the
fuller, eternal life with God in
heaven. This assumes that you,
yourselves, have a proper
sense of values and understand
what are the things that pos
sess true meaning. There is
only too much evidence that
there is among Catholics too
much concern for material
things, out of all proportion to
their value.”
The final essential ingredi
ent, Father Wenzel said, in
shaping a child’s personality is
“a sense of God.” He explain
ed: “This means more than
just a knowledge about God.
The child must understand
that God is a vital reality in
his life, the beginning and the
end of all his actions.”