Newspaper Page Text
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PAGE 6—’THE BULLETIN, May 27, 1961
OBITUARIES
Three Student Nurses
Killed In Accident
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for three Student
Nurses were held Tuesday
May 16th at the Cathedral of
St. John the Baptist.
Dead as a result of a high
way accident near Chester,
S. C., Saturday, May 13, are
Miss Theresa Blance Roughen,
Miss Linda Marie Palmer and
Miss Virginia Smith. All three
girls were freshmen at St. Jos
eph’s Hospital School of Nurs
ing.
Funeral services for Miss
Palmer and Miss Smith were
conducted at the Cathedral at
11:30 a. m. on May 16th. Bur
ial was in Catholic Cemetery.
Funeral services for Miss
Roughen were conducted at
the Cathedral at 9:30 a. m. on
May 16th. Burial was in Bona-
venture Cemetery.
Miss Palmer is the daughter
of Mrs. Frances G. Palmer of
305 E. 51st. Also surviving are
a sister, Jean Frances Palmer;
POTMAN - RAWLS
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Griffin, Ga.
W. B. Warnell, President
Established 1904
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and maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gallettini
of Wilmington Island.
Miss Roughen’s survivors are
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
rick H. Roughen; three sisters,
Miss Mary Elizabeth Roughen,
who was seriously injured in
the fatal accident, Mrs. Fred
Molkly of New Jersey and
Mrs. Arthur Moye of Savan
nah; two brothers, Captain
Albert H. Roughen of the U.S.
Marine Corps in Korea and
Patrick F. Roughen of Savan
nah.
Miss Smith is survived by
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eu
gene J. Smith; a sister, Suz
anne Smith of Savannah; and
her maternal grandmother
Mrs. Agnes McGowan of
Brentwood, Long Island, N. Y
* * *
James A. O'Leary
DECATUR — Funeral serv
ices for James A. O’Leary
were held Wednesday, May
17th at St. Thomas More
Church, Rt. Rev. Msgr. P. J
O’Connor officiating.
Survivors include his wife;
a daughter, Miss Linda O’
Leary; a son, David O’Leary;
four brothers, Neil O’Leary
all of Atlanta; Bert and Dan
O’Leary, Dublin, Ireland; and
Patrick O’Leary of Cork, Ire
land.
* * *
Laurence E. Gibbs
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Laurence E. Gibbs
were held at the Cathedral of
Christ the King. Father Allen
Dillman officiating.
Survivors are his wife; Miss
Beverly Gibbs and Miss Mary
Elaine Gibbs, Atlanta; Miss
Lois Gibbs, Sioux City, Iowa;
Melvin J. Gibbs, Custer, S. D.;
Donald S. Gibbs, Topeka, Kan.
Honorary
Degree
The motorist’s day in court
largely determines the effec
tiveness of law enforcement,
according to A. E. Spottke,
vice president of Allstate In
surance Companies. Whether
or not our traffic courts have
dignity and integrity determ
ines the attitude of millions of
people toward our entire sys
tem of justice.
LYMBURNER'S
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Phone 5532
452 North Hill Street
Griffin, Georgia
Dag Hammarskjold, Secre
tary General of the United
Nations, will be the principal
speaker at the University of
Notre Dame’s 116th com
mencement, June 4, and will
be awarded a honorary doc
torate by Father Theodore
M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., univer
sity president. Also being
honored are Laurian Car
dinal Rugambwa, Bishop of
Bukoba, Tanganyika, and
Aloisius Cardinal Muench, a
member of the Romas Curia
and former Bishop of Fargo,
• N. D. (NC Photos)
MARRIAGES
O O
LYONS-DOGLEY |
O O
SAVANNAH — Miss Mar
garet Mary Dooley, daughter,
of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Tho
mas Dooley, and Eugene Ed
ward Lyons, son of Mrs. Pat
rick Lyons, of Wilmington Is
land, were married May 13th
at the Sacred Heart Church,
Father Terrence Kernan,
O.S.B., officiating.
O O
MANUCY-McMILLIAN
O-
-O
SAVANNAH — Miss Nancy
Davis McMillan, daughter, of
Mrs. W. D. McMillan and the
late Mr. McMillan, and James
Edward Manucy, son of Mrs.
Julius A. Meyers, and the late
Mr. Manucy were married
May 13th at the Sacred Heart
Church, Father Terrence Ker
nan, O.S|B., officiating.
O : O
JOHANSEN-RHODES
O-
-O
SAVANNAH — Miss Esther
Parrish Rhode's, daughter, of
Mr. and Mrs. Truman E.
Rhodes and Thor M. Johansen,
son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Joe
Johansen, were married at the
Church of the Nativity of Our
Lord, May 6th, Rt. Rev. Msgr.
T. James McNamara officiat
ing.
O O
MADDEN-SMITH
O-
-O
VALDOSTA — Miss Angela
Smith, daughter, of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles E. Smith, and
Peter Madden, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Madden of Cin
cinnati, Ohio, were married
May 13th at St. John the
Evangelist Church.
O- O
SCHRENK-LOGAN
O-
SAVANNAH
O
Miss Kath-
Catholic Press
Should Reflect
Mind Of Church’
VANCOUVER, B. C. (NC)
Catholic publications should
reflect not just the image of
the Church, but the mind of
the Church, a Catholic lay edi
tor told fellow journalists here
John G. Deedy, Jr., editor
of the Pittsburgh Catholic,
newspaper of that Pennsyl
vania diocese, said his per
sonal view of the Church’s
mind is embodied in the pon
tificates of Popes Pius XII and
John XXIII.
“It is a happy blending of
the urbanity, the intelligence,
the broadness of vision of Pius
XII, with the humility, the
simple piety, the Christlike
concern and charity of John
XXIII,” he said.
The two Popes, he said, re
flect tone involvement in man
kind. “Here are men concern
ed not merely with individu
als saving their souls, but in
dividuals helping to save the
souls of neighbors; men anx
ious that not just Catholics,
but that Catholics, Protestants,
Jews, Mohammedans and all
others live at peace and har
mony with one another . .
Mr. Deedy spoke during a
panel discussion at the 51st
annual Catholic Press Associ
ation convention here. The
topic was: “The Philosophy of
the Catholic Press.”
At the same session, Father
Hugh Morley, O.F.M. Cap., ed
itor and business manager of
View, a monthly published in
Yonkers, N. Y., said the Cath
olic press must give the reader
“what he needs for his spiritu
al and intellectual growth.”
To do this, he continued, it
“must present current events
in the light of the teachings of
the Church and must examine
modern thought against
background of supernatural
values.”
“Daily happenings cannot
be viewed in a moral vac
uum,” he said. “To be under
stood, events must be evalu
ated as well as reported . . .
‘In short, it is the job of the
Catholic press to guide, to in
struct, to educate readers, to
enable them to look at the
passing scene through the eyes
of the Church, to make them
conscious of the Church’s mis
sion in the world — the sal
vation of mankind.”
erine Kerr Logan, daughter,
of Mrs. Malcolm Logan, and
the late Mr. Logan, and Wil
liam Joseph Schrenk, Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. William Jos
eph Schrenk of Sandusky,
Ohio, were married at the Ca
thedral of St. John the Baptist
May ,14th, Rt. Rev. Msgr. T.
James McNamara officiating.
O
O
o-
SHEEHAN-KLETT
O
AUGUSTA — Miss Mary
Klett, daughter, of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert H. Klett, and John
Edward Sheehan, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Edward Shee
han, Jr., were married May
6th at St. Mary’s-on-the-Hill,
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thomas A.
Brennan of Savannah officiat
ing.
Strike out on your own—it is
up to you to make your own
mark in the world.
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GRIFFIN, GEORGIA
Fr. O'Brien
(Continued from Page 4)
talking, no laughing and few
smiles. They were there to
worship God and they knew
He was present on the altar
and they acted accordingly.
Here all was unity in faith
and practice: no feuds, no dis
sension. The priest called the
shots; he took orders in spirit
ual matters from no parishion
er. I liked that. He spoke with
authority.
“Gradually I came to per
ceive that it was the authority
which Christ bestowed upon
the Church which enabled it
to have such marvelous unity
nd to secure such obedience
from its members. To His first
bishops and priests Jesus said:
“Go, therefore, and make dis
ciples of all nations . . .”
(Matt. 28:19) . . . preach the
gospel to every creature . . .”
(Mark 16:15). “He who hears
you, hears me; and he who re
jects you, rejects me” (Luke
10:16). Here was the divine
basis of the Church’s author
ity and the guarantee of her
unity.
“I took a course of instruc
tion from Father Louis Janes-
ko at St. Edward’s Church,
Texarkana, and was received
into the Church, founded by
Our Lord for the salvation of
all men. My holy Faith helps
me to grow daily in the love
of God and neighbor. God has
privileged me to help one per
son into the fold as a thanks
offering. Charlene McDaniel
had begun a course, dropped
out, and was ashamed to go
back. I lent her a little hand,
and now she too is a devout
Catholic.”
Father O’Brien will be glad
to have converts send their
names and address to him at
Notre Dame University, Notre
Dame, Indiana, so he may write
up their conversion stories.
Question
Box
(Continued from Page 4)
tion ‘What are you?’ — for na
ture decides what a person is.
By the one nature he could do
all that goes with being God
— he could read the heart of
man, for instance,- he could
raise Lazarus to life; by the
other he could do all that goes
with being man — he could be
born of a mother, could hun
ger and thirst, could suffer,
could die.
ALL THE foregoing argu
mentation is summarized in
this classic syllogism: Mary is
the mother of Christ. But
Christ is God. Therefore, Mary
can properly be called the Mo
ther of God.
* * *
Q. The current "Look"
magazine's story about
Gheel — the famed Belgian
refuge for ihe menially ill
— nalurally meniions ihe
legend of St. Dympna, a pa
troness of ihe mentally dis
turbed, who was supposedly
martyred at the site of the
preseni town. What I would
like to know is this: Is her
legend true?
A. The St. Dympna (or
Dymphna) legend is excellent
ly characterized in the words
of one of the physicians inter
viewed at Gheel by ‘Look’ for
its article:
“It is over 1,300 years since
her death, and we really don’t
know how much of the Dymp
na legend is factual. But one
thing we do know. Thanks to
St. Dympna, something hap
pened in Gheel and that some
thing started what you see to
day. It is unique on earth. Our
written records of cases receiv
ed and treated go back over
500 years and the Gheel sys
tem was in'effect for centuries
before that. I can’t believe that
such a work for good can
halt.”
THE POINT is that the
memory of a martyr who is
popularly venerated as St.
Dympna, and concerning
whom all historical details
have probably been lost, has
become the inspiration for ex
traordinary works of ture
charity. Saints, after all, are
honored only because they are
close to God, whose glory they
reflect, and who can, conse
quently, bring our petitions to
his knowledge in a special
way. Even if St. Dympna’s
legend is not objectively true,
it is obvious that God has
blessed the work accomplished
for mentally ill persons in her
name. The divine benediction
is not thwarted by human er
ror.
It Seems
(Continued from Page 4)
men to return to the iniquitous
and insulting “count and dis
count them” maneuver? And
why is he deaf to our en
treaties for our children?
He talks about separation of
church and state; but he
knows there are constitutional
ways of insuring reasonable
educational equity. Therefore,
I ask again: “Mr. Kennedy,
why do you ignore us so stu
diously?” And I await an an
swer.
Teresa Leroy
Rose McDonald
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