Newspaper Page Text
THE BULLETIN, October 28, 1961—PAGE 3
OBITUARIES
Clinton F. Dwyer
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Clinton F. Dwyer were
held at the Cathedral of
Christ the King October 14th,
Father Joseph Beltran offici
ating.
Survivors include a daugh
ter, Mrs. Mary Patricia Fris-
bee, Lakeland, Fla.; two sons,
Paul J. Dwyer, Chicago; James
F. Dwyer, Belmont, Calif.;
three brothers, Raymond
Dwyer, New York; Gerald and
Arthur Dwyer, both of St.
Louis, Mo.
Michael Tarantino
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Michael Tarantino
were held at the Cathedral of
Christ the King October 16th,
Father Allen Dillman officiat
ing.
Surviving are his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Tarantino,
Atlanta; grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Albert S. Mayo, Lake
Charles, La.; Mrs. T. J. Taran
tino, Mobile, Alabama.
Mrs. Dulmage
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Kathryn Lowen-
thal Dulmage were held at Our
Lady of the Assumption
Church October 10th, Father
John Stapleton officiating.
Surviving are daughters,
Mrs. Charles Williams, Atlan
ta; Sister Mary Agatha, R.S.M.,
Baltimore; two sisters, Mrs.
Wilbur Roth and Mrs. A. Leck-
inger, Rochester, N. Y.; bro
ther, G. B. Lowenthal, Miami,
Fla.; one grandson, Thomas G.
Williams, Atlanta.
Col. Colston
COLUMBUS — Funeral serv
ices were held Monday, Octo
ber 23rd at Holy Family
Church for Col. Charles W.
Colston, Sr., Ret., Rt. Rev.
Msgr. Herman J. Deimel, V.F.,
pastor of St. Anne’s, officiating.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Victoria Colston; and son,
Charles Colston, Jr., both of
Columbus. A daughter, Mrs.
Marie Kempe of Greenville,
South Carolina.
Burial was in the Ft. Ben-
ning Cemetery.
SFC J. Olexa, Jr.
COLUMBUS—Funeral serv
ices for S/FC. John Olexa, Jr.,
were held at St. Anne’s Church
October 9th, Father Lawrence
lA. Lucree officiating.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
*Lee Loe Olexa; one son,
James Joseph Olexa; daugh
ter, Deborah Olexa, all of Col
umbus; parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Olexa, Sr., Penn; two sis
ters, Mrs. D. L. Odell and Miss
Ann Olexa, Bound Brook, N.
J.; three brothers, Michael,
Olexa, U. S. A. F., Hawaii; Ste
phen Olexa, Scranton, Penn.;
George Olexa, Trenton, N. J.
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Mrs. Shannon
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Charles John
Shannon were held at the Ca
thedral of Christ the King, Oc
tober 10th, Father Allen Dill-
man officiating.
Surviving are Miss Mary B.
Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. C.
Preston Bradford, Atlanta; Mr.
and Mrs. E. J. Brennen, Miss
Francenia Brennan, all of Col
umbia, S. C.; Charles Shannon
Bradford, Robert Preston
Bradford, Elizabeth Bradford.
F. B. Miller
COLUMBUS—Funeral serv
ices for Frank Boykin Miller
were held September 29, at
the Church of the Holy Fam
ily, Father Walter D. Frances
co officiating.
Mr. Miller is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Gertrude B. Miller;
daughter, Miss Mary Kathleen
Miller and one son, Joseph B.
Miller, all of Columbus.
Miss Inez Callahan
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Miss Inez Callahan
were held at St. Anthony’s
Church October 18th, Rt. Rev.
James E. King officiating.
Survivors are Miss Margaret
Callahan, Miss Eloise Callahan,
Mrs. C. A. Eyrick, C. A. Calla
han, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Calla
han, Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Callahan and Thomas F. Calla
han.
Mrs. C. E. Blakewood
SAVANNAH—Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. C. E. Blakewood
were held at the Sacred Heart
Church October 7th.
Survivors are her husband,
Charles E. Blakewood; a son,
Richard A. Blakewood, and
three grandchildren.
Mrs. Homes Smith
MACON — Funeral services
for Mrs. Homes Smith were
held at St. Joseph’s Church
September 27th, Monsignor
Thomas I. Sheehan officiating.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. H. A. Dewberry, Rome;
son, John R. Smith, Sacramen
to, Calif.; five grandchildren,
four great-grandchildren, two
sisters, Mrs. Charles M. Hug-
ley, Athens; Mrs. W. A. Hews,
Decatur.
Mrs. Mary Rayola
SAVANNAH—Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Mary Rayola
were held Sept. 18th at the
Sacred Heart Church.
Surviving are three sons and
one daughter: Vincent Rayola
of New York; John Rayola of
Miami; Louis Rayola of Sav
annah; Jeanette Rayola of
Savannah.
Pallbearers were Gustave
Holman, Joseph M. Cafiero,
Daniel Pugliese, Joseph Uli-
vo, B. L. Ferraro and John M.
McDonough.
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Quarterbacks—Young and Old—Talk It Over
George Izo (right), star quarterback of the Washington Redskins and former All-
American from Notre Dame University discusses plans for National Catholic Youth
Week (Oct. 29 to Nov. 5) with Steven Piron of the Archdiocese of Washington CYO.
Izo also passed on a few football tips to the teenage quarterback. (NC Photos)
Sees No Soviet Change In Religious Attitude
oscow Chaplain Found Churches Filled
(NCWC News Service)
WORCESTER, Mass. — Fa
ther Louis F. Dion, A.A., just
back from almost three years’
service as a chaplain in Mos
cow, said he found churches in
the Soviet capital “filled with
people” for Sunday services.
Father Dion, 47, returned to
the United States October 15
after serving as chaplain to
American Catholics in Moscow
since January, 1959.
The Assumptionist priest
said in an interview that some
45 Russian Orthodox churches
are open in Moscow, as well
as a Moslem mosque, a Jewish
synagogue, a Baptist church,
a Catholic church and a chapel
in the apartment of the Ameri
can Catholic chaplain.
He said he had visited some
of the Orthodox churches and
the Catholic Church of St.
Louis of the French, and that
on Sundays he found them
full of worshipers. On major
feasts like Easter and Christ
mas, he added, the churches
were “overflowing.”
He noted, however, that the
“great majority” of the peo
ple in the congregations ap
peared to be “middle aged or
upwards.”
He predicted that the official
attitude of the Soviet regime
toward religion “will not
change.” The press continues
to publish articles hostile to
religion, he said.
Father Dion was the fifth
American priest, all of them
Assumptionists, to serve in
Moscow under the terms of the
1933 Roosevelt-Litvinov agree-
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ment establishing diplomatic
relations between the U. S.
and the Soviet Union.
His replacement in Moscow
is Father Joseph Richard, A.A.,
who left New York for the
Soviet Union in August. Fa
ther Dion has returned to the
post he held before going to
Russia — that of registrar at
Assumption College here.
Father Dion’s immediate
predecessor in Moscow was
Father Georges Bissonnette,
A.A., who was summarily ex
pelled by the Soviets in March,
1955, in retaliation for U. S.
refusal to prolong the visa of a
visiting Soviet churchman.
Father Dion had to wait
more than three years after
Father Bissionnette’s expul
sion before he received his
Soviet visa enabling him to go
to Moscow. He finally did go
in January, 1959, flying from
Paris to Moscow aboard the
same plane which carried
French• communist leader
Jacques Duclos to a commun
ist party congress.
Father Dion said that dur
ing his stay in the Soviet Un
ion he was “treated very well”
by the authorities and was
“not discriminated against in
any way because I was a
priest.”
He described his relations
with the authorities as “very
normal.”
For the most part he con
ducted services in the chapel
in his apartment. On five oc
casions, however, the authori
ties allowed him to offer Mass
in the Church of St. Louis of
the French, whose pastor is a
Polish priest.
The occasions for which this
permission was granted were
various special events involv
ing the Moscow foreign diplo
matic corps, Father Dion ex
plained. On each occasion the
foreign government involved
requested and obtained for
him the permission of the Sov
iet authorities to offer Mass in
the church.
He said permission for him
to offer Mass in the church
was denied on one occasion—-
when he had sought to marry
an American couple there.
Father Dion’s “parishioners”
usually numbered about 125
and came from the foreign col
ony in Moscow. About 35 or 40
of them were Americans. In
addition, the priest said, there
were “quite a few” tourists in
Moscow in the summers and
their presence meant an in
crease in the size of his con
gregation.
He commented that even
without his presence the sac
raments were available to for
eign Catholics in Moscow from
the Polish priest at St. Louis of
the French. But the Polish
priest’s languages were limit
ed to Polish, Russian and a
little German, and the foreign
Catholics who spoke none of
these languages were “very
happy” to have on hand in
Father Dion a priest who could
speak English and French.
Father Dion said that what
isolation he experienced in
Moscow was “the isolation of
the priesthood.” For most of
the year the only other priest
in the city was the Polish pas
tor of St. Louis of the French,
with whom he had very little
contact.
During the summers, he said,
there were usually several
priest-visitors to Moscow—“at
least a dozen each year”—who
came as tourists, travelers or
participants in various interna
tional meetings.
The Assumptionist reported
that he kept “quite busy” in
Moscow attending to his duties
as chaplain and the details of
his own day-to-day life. He
said he found his service in
Moscow “most interesting.”
Father Dion said he had
traveled extensively in the
Soviet Union, encountering
“no special difficulties” be
yond those of any other travel
er in the U.S.S.R. Persons
planning a trip must submit a
detailed itinerary in advance
and have it approved by the
authorities, and no changes in
the schedule are permitted, he
noted.
He said he visited Georgia
twice, including its capital of
Tiflis, where there is an open
Catholic church with an 83-
year-old pastor. He went also
to Armenia, Tashkent, Samar
kand, Odessa, Lithuania, Lat
via and Leningrad. In Odessa,
Lithuania and Leningrad he
also found open Catholic
churches and Catholic priests.
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Archbishop Carboni
Chinese Communism
Seen Special Threat
To Latin America
LIMA, Peru (NC) — The
Apostolic Nuncio to Peru has
stated that Chinese commun
ism represents a tremendous
threat to the Church in Latin
America.
Archbishop Romolo Carboni
asserted that China’s brand of
communism is a special type
which seeks to destroy the
Church by trying to divide it
against itself. He said the Chi
nese communists “are attempt
ing to set. bishop against bish
op, priest against priest.”
The Nuncio spoke at the
closing session of a 10-day
press seminar conducted here
by members of the Catholic
Press Association of the Unit
ed States and Canada. The
five-man team composed ot
U. S. Catholic editors is head
ed by Father Eugene Culhane,
S.J., managing editor of
America magazine.
Also attending the (Oct. 10)
closing of the seminar were
Archbishop Juan Landazuri of
Peru, which sponsored the
seminar.
The directress of the School
of Journalism of Catholic Uni
versity of Peru, Matilde Perez
Palacios, presented certificates
to the 40 participants who
completed the course.
Holy Office Liberalizes
Rules For Reception Of
Holy Communion By Sick
VATICAN CITY (Radio,
NC) — Sick persons who are
unable to leave their homes
may now receive Holy Com
munion in the afternoon or
evening even if they are not
bedridden or in danger of
death, the Sacred Congrega
tion of the Holy Office has
ruled.
The ruling was issued (Oct.
21) on the authority of His
Holiness Pope John XXIII.
It contains three provisions
which seek to forestall excess
ive use of the new privilege
and the creation of difficulties
for parish priests. The Holy
Office stipulated:
1) The new concession is
available only to people who
have not been able to leave
their homes for a week be
cause of illness.
2) In making use of the priv
ilege, consideration must be
given to what local priests are
able to do. Local priests will
judge each case whether the
request of a sick person is rea
sonable and will also set the
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time for taking Communion to
him.
3) The Eucharistic fast for
sick persons must be observed.
This means that they must ab
stain from solid food and alco
hol drinks for three hours be-
f o r e Communion, although
they may drink nonalcoholic
liquids and take any medicines
—in liquid or solid form—
without any restriction of time
limit.
L’Osservatore Romano, Vat
ican City daily, commented on
the Holy Office ruling, noting
that it gives all Catholics the
most ample opportunity to re
ceive Communion. It express
ed the hope, however, that
Catholics “will abstain from
increasing requests to obtain
still more ample dispensations,
which would practically lead
to a total elimination of the
Eucharistic fast.”
No Business
Like Nose
Business
TAICHUNG, Formosa —
While many entertainers in the
U. S. undergo surgery to have
the proboscis reduced in size,
on this Oriental island the fad
is to have the nose enlarged.
“And it’s all because of the
influence of American mov
ies,” claims Maryknoll Fayther
Francis X. Keelan, of Cam
bridge, Mass., a veteran China
missioner. “Time was when
Orientals looked with disdain
on foreigners as ‘big nose’ peo
ple. But today, for a small $10
fee, many young Formosans
are lining up at clinics to have
noses just like their favorite
American movie stars.”
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