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PAGE 2—THE BULLETIN, March 31,1962
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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 benefit of
authors, publishers, reviewers
and readers.
COME, LET US WORSHIP.
by Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B.,
Helicon Press, 1961, 180 pp.,
$4.50.
Reviewed by
E. Matthews
Come, Let Us Worship is an
invitation to learn the fuller
and deeper meanings of our
religious practices. Father God
frey Diekmann here publishes
the lectures he has given at
different National Liturgical
Weeks, and he includes such
topics as “Popular Participa
tion and the History of Chris
tian Piety,” The Lord’s Day
in the Old and New Testa
ment” and “Reflections on
Eucharistic Fast.”
In his foreword, Archbishop
Edward D. Howard recom
mends the book to the priest
and the seminarian, but Come
Let Us Worship will be of
stimulating interest to all who
understand the liturgical
movement as having for its
“chief objective to guide and
direct and encourage a proper
. . . personal co-operation bas
ed on our understanding of
what the sacrament . . . ac
complishes in us and demands
of us.”
The encyclical Mediator Dei
of Pius XII is quoted extens
ively to give support to the
clarification of the aims of the
liturgical movement and to re
mind us that the liturgy is the
measure of all forms of private
devotions.
Father Dickemann has given
us a scholarly work, but he
has written as a teacher, as one
eager to make his points clear
to everyone (all Latin phrases
are translated in the text).
This book will surely be a spi
ritually rich experience for all
readers.
Come, Lei Us Worship is in
the series of Benedictine Stu
dies.
THE UNFINISHED REFOR
MATION, by Hans Asmussen
and others; translated by Rob
ert J. Olsen, Fides, 1961, 213
pp., $4.95.
Reviewed by
W. L. Schmidt
This is a book by Protest
ants for Catholics, with a pen
etrating foreword by John P.
Dolan, C.S.C., of the University
of Notre Dame, on the various
reformations that occurred
within the church throughout
the centuries. This book was
originally published in Ger-
m a n y under the title “The
Catholic Reformation,” and
was the result of the Samm-
lung, an organization of Ger
man Lutheran clergy and' lai
ty who have been praying for
the unity of divided Christen
dom. Persuaded that “men
must face the question of truth
more earnestly than ever be
fore,” they have examined the
causes of the Protestant Refor
mation. But their efforts are
lent more extensively to ex
amining Catholicity in its uni
versal sense, and in working
in behalf of the pressing need
for unity so that Christ’s wish
that all may be one in His
Mystical Body may finally be
fulfilled. Many years may in
tervene in the accomplishment,
and much work needs yet to be
done. But a start has been
made and the future is hopeful.
Presented here are seven cir
cular letters which invited
clergy and laity alike to con
sider fundamental questions of
the Christian church and es
pecially Evangelical Christi
anity. Following them are
commentaries on the “Twelve
Evangelical Theses of Catho
lic Truths” by five Lutheran
pastors.
Readers will be surprised, as
the blurb says, how “Catholic”
a “Protestant” book can be.
Indeed they will. It will also
arouse in them a deep sympa
thy for, and create much un
derstanding of, the problems
and the position of Protestant
ism, particularly of Lutheran
ism.
A YANKEE PRIVATE'S CI
VIL WAR, by Robert Hale
Strong, edited by Ashley Hal
sey, Regnery, 218 pp., $3.95.
Reviewed by
Michele Caraher
After the war was over,
MARRIAGES
O-
NORRIS-CRAWFORD
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SAVANNAH — Miss Linda
Irine Crawford, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Michael
Crawford, and James Ogden
Norris, son of Mrs. Helen E.
Shuman were married March
3rd at the Blessed Sacrament
Church, Father George C.
James officiating.
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SAVANNAH — Miss Fran
ces Eileen Weeks, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Weeks,
Sr. and Donald Joseph Saylor,
so nof Mrs. Agnes Sayor and
the late Thomas W. Sayor were
married March 3rd at the Ca
thedral of St. John the Bap
tist, Rt. Rev. Msgr. T. James
McNamara officiating.
Robert Hale Strong, a Union
private from Illinois, wrote his
memoirs from the letters and
diaries he had sent home. How
much he — and the editor —
improved the account would
be hard to say, but the book
still remains one of the most
vivid and realistic of the Civil
war memorabilia. As a soldier
and forager in the Atlanta and
Carolinas campaigns, he saw a
great deal of action, country
side and people. In addition,
he must have had an inquisi
tive nature and a;practical out
look. One sees |n acceptance
of appalling medical condi
tions, the Union view of the
Confederacy as traitorous, the
independent spirit of enlisted
men !«nd their refusal to put
up with cowardly or stupid
officers), the brutality ana cu
rious chivalry of American
against American, and the sol
diers’ irritation with civilians.
Historical notes and a fore
word are provided by Mr. Hal
sey.
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BROTHER SOLOMON, by
W. J. Battersby, Macmillan,
1960, 181 pp., $6.00.
Reviewed by
W. L. Schmidt
Nicolas Le Clercq was just
another French boy enjoying
peaceful living in Bologne only
a few years before the black
clouds of the Revolution cov
ered France. Instead of follow
ing his father in a successful
business, he felt drawn to re
ligion and joined the Brothers
of the Christian Schools,
foundded by St. John Baptist
de la Salle, where he became
known as Brother Solomon.
Dr. Battersby, the first to
write the story of Brother Sol
omon, draws greatly from the
historical events of this critical
period in French history. At
his disposal, too, were the 130
letters Brother Solomon wrote
his parents and relatives which
are now in the archives of the
Brothers of Christian Schools
in Rome.
The life of Brother Solomon
was not extraordinary, though
he bore various positions of
responsibility as a religious
because of his above-average
abilities. The story increases in
interest, however, as the period
of the Revolution is firmly en
tered into. Here Dr. Battersby
is at his best as he deposits the
animal-like frenzy of human
beings exerting their hatred
against the aristocracy, the no
bility, and the clergy. It was
during the peak of this human
upheaval in Paris that Brother
Solomon, along with others of
his community, were martyred
for not swearing allegiance to
the new regime.
In addition to revealing for
the first time the life of this
martyr, the book will also be
of interest to the student of the
French Revolution.
OBITUARIES
J. G. Callaghan
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Joseph G. Callaghan
were held at the Sacred Heart
Church March 21st, Father
Thomas J. Roshetko officiat
ing.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Joseph G. Callaghan; Mr.
and Mrs. James G. Schultz,
Euclid, Ohio; grandchildren.
Mrs. Clark
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Nora Joyce Clark
were held March 21st at St.
Anthony’s Church, Father
Daniel J. O’Connor officiating.
Survivors are, Mr. and Mrs.
Alton King, Atlanta; Mr. and
Mrs. Glynn Wysong, Mr. and
Mrs. M. C. de Sousa, Mr. and
Mrs. Winifred Hartman, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward J. Clark,
Glynn Clark, all of Chicago;
Mrs. Sarah J. Thrayer, Seattle,
Wash.; Mrs. Lewis J. Clark,
Tucson, Ariz.; Mrs. S. J. Clark,
Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. James
Bruce Daniel, Miss Helen Ann
King, Charles N. King.
mann officiating.
Survived by her husband,
Lawrence W. Robert, III, Dr.
and Mrs. Raymond Schendl,
Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Law
rence W. Robert, IV, Charles
Mion, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Fain,
Mr. and Mrs. John Mion and
grandchildren.
Mrs. Hansen
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Fred A. (Theresa)
Hansen were held at St. An-
thony’s Church, March 10th,
Father Denis Dullea officiat
ing.
Surviving are her daughter,
Mrs. Robert J. Dalton; son,
James R. Hansen; sisters, Mrs.
W. B. Roberts, Mrs. J. A. Pep-
pard and Mrs. Eleanor Blase,
and seven grandchildren.
Mrs. Ingalls
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Elliott M. (Helen)
Ingalls were held at the Ca
thedral of Christ the King
March 20th, Father Allen Dill-
mann officiating.
Mrs. Robert III
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Lawrence W.
Robert, III, were held at the
Cathedral of Christ the King,
March 16th, Father Allen Dill-
PADRE PIO, by Oscar De
Liso, McGraw-Hill, 1960, 230
pp., $4.95.
Reviewed by
W. L. Schmidt
It was the morning of Sep-
temebr 20, 1918. When Brother
Nicola had looked in for the
third time on Father Pio, who
had been praying behind the
altar of the chapel in the Ca
puchin Monastery of San Gio
vanni Rotondo in southern
Italy, he found him lying on
the floor. Blood oozed from
his hands, his side, and his
feet. Brother Nicola didn’t rea
lize then that Father Pio, pos
sibly the first priest in history,
had received the wounds of
Christ. He bears them to this
day.
This book comes to life as a
result of Oscar De Liso’s ex
tensive spade work personally
carried out in the community
where Father Pio lives. The
great amount of research is ev-
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ident on every page and con-
trbiutes a sense of unusual au
thenticity. Absent is the usual
pietistic thought revelations,
necessarily very subjective to
the omniscient author, so often
found in spiritual biographies.
De Liso presents the facts and
the activities of Father Pio’s
life, and those around him. He
allows the reader to draw his
own conclusions.
Very strong impressions will
bear down on the reader as
he is vividly made to see Fa
ther Pio in his sufferings, his
concern for the poor and the
crippled around him. The pre
sentation of the practical side
of Father Pio contributes tow
ards an impelling story of a
living miracle.
THE VICTORIAN VISION,
by Margaret M. Maison, Sheed
& Ward, 1961, 343 pp., $4.50.
Reviewed by
Flannery O'Connor
The favorite subject of the
Victorians was religion. From
Tractarian to Dissenter to Lat-
itudinarian, their pre-oceupa
tion was with questions of
man’s right relationship to
God. Even Agnosticism as it
began to take over toward the
end of the period took on the
lineaments of a religion. Dr
Maison in The Victorian Vis
ion analyzes Victorian religious
opinion as it is seen in popular
novels of the period. Most of
the novels she discusses are
unashamedly propagandistic,
badly written, and to the mod
ern reader sources of high
comedy. One of the funniest
aspects of these novels was the
treatment of tha villian of the
Protestant imagination — the
Jesuit. He was “a spy, a secret
agent, suave, supercilious and
satanically unscrupulous, lay
ing his cunning plots for the
submission of England to ‘Jes-
uitocracy’, weedling rich wi
dows, forcing his converts to
change their wills in favor of
his order, to kneel in penitence
for hours through chilly nights
and to leave their families at
a minute’s notice.”
Not all the religious novel
ists of the period were of this
stamp. Both Newman and
Manning wrote novels as well
as Disraeli. Dr. Maison ha
read an incredible number of
these books, both good and
bad, and analyzes them with
zest. The result is one of the
most enjoyable and enlighten
ing books that have been writ
ten. about the Victorian tem
per.
Edward Weigle
AUGUSTA — Funeral serv
ices for Edward Goodrich Wei
gle were held at St. Patrick’s
Church March 10th, Father
Ralph E. Seikl officiating.
He is survived by one son,
Edward G. Weigle, Jr., of Au
gusta; one sister, Mrs. Eulalie
Wren, Augusta; one brother,
Charles H. Weigle, and four
grandchildren, all of Augusta.
Mrs. Herman
AUGUSTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Mary Sheehan
Herman were held at the Sac-
ed Heart Church March 16th,
Father Gerald Armstrong, S.J.,
her nephew, officiating.
She is survived by three
daughters, Sister Mary Louise,
C.S.J., Mrs. T- H. Brittingham,
both of Augusta; Mrs. Robert
Arthur, Athens; two sons, W.
A. Herman, Jr., and M. J. Her
man, both of Augusta; one sis
ter, Mrs. C. C. Kemp of Au
gusta; 14 grandchildren and 23
great-grandchildren.
William Chapman
SAVANNAH—Funeral serv
ices for William T. Chapman
were held at the Cathedral of
St. John the Baptist, March
12th.
Surviving are three daugh
ters, Mrs. William J. Foran,
Miss Adelaide Chapman, both
of Savannah; Mrs. Joe Majes
tic, Brooklyn, N. Y.; a son,
William T. Chapman, Jr., of
McLean, Va.; a brother, Dewey
Chapman, Baltimore, Md.; a
sister, Mrs. Mary E. Pipitone,
Miami.
J. J. Patterson, Sr.
SAVANNAH—Funeral serv
ices for John J. Patterson were
held at the Blessed Sacrament
Church March 13th.
Survivors are three daugh
ters, Mrs. Allen J. Browne,
Mrs. William H. Haar and Mrs.
Robert A. Finnegan, all of Sav
annah; six sons, William M.
Patterson, Camden, N. J.; John
A. Patterson, Charleston, S. C.;
James D. Patterson and John
J. Patterson, Jr., both of New
York City, Joseph V. Patter
son and Edward M. Patterson,
both of Savannah; a sister,
Mrs. Robert Girvin, Miami,
Fla.; 18 grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren.
W. S. Fowler
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for William S. Fowler
were held at St. Anthony’s
Church March 17th, Father
Daniel J. O’Connor officiating
Survivors are Mrs. William
S .Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. John
F. Chapman, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert T. Thurber, New Or
leans, La.; Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam H. Fowler, Mr. D. Joseph
Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Clement
P. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. James
P. Connick, Sr., New Orleans,
La.; Mr. and Mrs. Bryant
Steadham, Alama, Calif.; Mr.
and Mrs. John Neimer, Mil-
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Mrs. T. S. Dvorak
VALDOSTA—Requiem High
Mass was offered March 12th
at St. John’s Church for Mrs.
T. S. Dvorak, Father Thomas
Payne celebrant, assisted by
Father John O’Shea, former
pastor. Mass was sung by the
Girls Choir of St. John’s
School.
Mrs. Dvorak was past presi
dent of the Catholic Women’s
Club, a member of the Legion
of Mary, a pink lady at the
local hospital and a member
of the Valdosta Garden Club.
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Her interest in parish life
was very intense, she master-
mnided over a number of
years, social functions and fi
nancial programs, did parish
bookkeeping for four years, and
personally maintained the Sac
risty, altar and vestments.
She is survived by her hus
band, two daughters, Miss
Joan Dvorak, and Mrs. Lonnie
Singleton, and a granddaugh
ter.
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