Spring 2011 - Jesuits Central and Southern

Transcription

Spring 2011 - Jesuits Central and Southern
The
Spring 2011
Jesuit
southern
From Our Provincial
Total Detachment…Total Immersion…Total Cooperation…
It is the responsibility of the Society to ensure that all Jesuits
are formed and continue to grow in these three qualities of our
missionary spirit, whether the context of a Jesuit’s mission is a
foreign country or a mission in one’s country of origin.
Fr. Adolfo Nicolás, S.J., Superior General of the Society of Jesus
In Fr. General’s letter on the 20th
Anniversary of the death of Fr. Arrupe,
Fr. Nicolás exhorts all provincials to
ensure that our men, starting with our
novices, develop these three qualities of
the Jesuit missionary spirit.
I thank God that I have many brother Jesuits to assist me in this important
responsibility. Fathers Mark Thibodeaux
and Dan White work diligently to develop in our novices a first understanding of these Jesuit qualities, and the
superiors of our local communities help
them foster a deeper understanding.
In this issue of The Southern Jesuit
we see wonderful examples of detachment, immersion and cooperation.
Detachment from jobs, positions,
places of honor and stability of place
helps us focus on caring for and ministering to those with us. This is seen in
Fr. Ron Gonzales’ piece about his work
in San Antonio – the same focus and
passion he shared previously in both
Albuquerque and El Paso.
Immersion into “the environment,
work and context” of whatever our
mission is provides Jesuits with a fuller
understanding of the local situation so
we can more creatively react to local
needs. Simply look at the story about Fr.
Ken Johnson’s work at Queen Elizabeth
Hospital in Malawi.
Cooperation with others is a recognition that our mission “is far greater
than what any single Jesuit can dream
or do.” We cannot, nor should we, go it
alone in our formation process or in our
ministry. This is illustrated in the experiments “fully in the world” in which our
novices participate during their two
years of novitiate training.
Laying the proper foundation
for these qualities begins with our
St. Stanislaus Kostka Novitiate at St.
Charles College in Grand Coteau. I ask
that you read the articles on both those
who are overseeing the renovations of
St. Charles College and those who are
making these improvements possible
through their volunteer efforts.
As we go through this Easter Season, I ask your prayers for success in
forming these young novices in the three
mission qualities and that we are able to
properly provide for them.
Yours in Christ,
Mark Lewis, S.J.
staff
The Southern Jesuit is a publication of the Jesuits of the New Orleans Province.
Mark A. Lewis, S.J., Provincial
Michael D. Dooley, S.J., Socius
John Armstrong, S.J., Assistant for
Formation
Mary Baudouin, Assistant for the Social
Ministries
Michael S. Bourg, Executive Director for
Advancement
Michael A. Bouzigard, S.J., Assistant for
the International Ministries
Warren J. Broussard, S.J., Assistant for
Pastoral and Retreat Ministry
Paul Deutsch, S.J., Director of Vocations
Anthony F. McGinn, S.J., Assistant for
Secondary Education
Lawrence J. Lundin, S.J., Treasurer
Send inquiries and article submissions to:
The Southern Jesuit
Attn: Editor
710 Baronne Street, Suite B
New Orleans, LA 70113-1064
phone:1.800.788.1719
fax:504.571.1744
email:[email protected]
Brooke A. Iglesias, Editor
2 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
For donations, bequests, wills and trusts our legal title is
Jesuit Seminary and Mission Fund, New Orleans.
Jesuit
cont ents
The
Jesuit
connections
What do Neil Armstrong, Tom Hanks and
the Jesuits have in common?
Given the Ignatian tradition of
excellence in education and learning,
it is hardly surprising that some of the
most definitive and long-lasting discoveries in science and mathematics
have come from Jesuits. Long before
Neil Armstrong’s visit to the Sea of
Tranquility or Tom Hanks’ command of
Apollo 13 for moviegoers, Jesuits were
studying the heavens. One prominent
example is Christopher Clavius who is
called the “Euclid of the 16th Century.”
Clavius is also known for his work in
the field of astronomy, specifically his
support of the once highly controversial
heliocentric theory. Other well-known
Jesuit astronomers include Boscovich,
Grimaldi, Ricci and Tacquet. Their
contributions have ranged from the
wave theory of light to the discovery
of the four moons of Jupiter. In light
of such breakthroughs, it seems almost
inevitable that several Jesuits have even
managed to land on the moon. Or at
least their names have.
Need proof? Look no further than
Washington, D.C., where a copy of a
17th century, hand-drawn selenograph
(or map of the moon) is kept at the
Smithsonian. The map, created by Jesuit
astronomers Francesco Grimaldi and
Jean-Baptiste Riccioli in 1651, was
the subject of heated debates for many
years. For almost three centuries, astronomers took turns naming and re-naming
the lunar craters depicted on it, and at
one time the map included 40 craters
named for prominent Jesuit scientists.
The International Astronomical Union
put an end to this, however, when it officially codified all lunar objects in 1922.
Since then, 35 of the original 40 Jesuit
names remain listed in the National Air
and Space Museum (NASM) catalogue.
Even after landing 35 men on the
moon, the Jesuit pursuit of knowledge
in mathematics and astronomy has not
lost momentum. A great example of
this today is the Vatican Observatory in
Castel Gandolfo, Italy, an organization
with a special dedication to astronomy
and astrophysics in particular. The
observatory, perhaps most known for
its ongoing Studi Galileiani, is staffed
by a dedicated team of Jesuit researchers. Two of these Jesuit researchers are
Rev. David Brown (pg. 19) and retired
member Rev. Andrew Whitman (pg. 18),
who continue to explore the invaluable
connections between mathematics, science and faith.
After such incredible contributions
to their fields, it would not be surprising to see the names Brown or Whitman
added to the NASM catalogue. Until
that happy day, a list of the existing 35
Jesuit lunar craters, with their full names
and locations, can be found at www.faculty.fairfield.edu/jmac/sj/lunacrat.htm.
southern
From Our Provincial
2
Jesuit Connections
3
Formation:
Our Shared Future 4
A Jesuit in New Orleans by Way of
Kansas City8
Testing and Experimenting:
Life in the Novitiate9
Ministries:
Where y’at?
12
A Pilgrim’s Progress
13
The Winds of Change
Upon Jesuit High Schools
14
MISSIONS:
Healing and Helping
our Brothers and Sisters
16
Senior Jesuits:
A Mathematician for Christ18
MINISTRY
Exploring the Heavens
19
RENEWING A SACRED PlACE:
Br. Larry Huck, S.J.
Evaneline M. Vavrick
20
21
In Memoriam:
Celebrating the Eternal Life
22
From the Executive Director
23
IN GRATITUDE
Annual Report
24
on the cover
Second-year novice David Lugo and
the people of Santa Maria Chiquimula
in Guatemala await the beginning of a
religious procession honoring the first
translation of the Bible into their native
Mayan dialect of K’iche’.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 3
Formation
Jeffrey Johnson (far left), Johnathan Brown
(second from right) and Aaron Pidel
(far right) at their diaconate ordination at
St. Ignatius Church in Boston
Our Shared Future
The New Orleans and Missouri Provinces will celebrate
the ordination of seven new Jesuit priests in June 2011. These
Jesuits begin their priestly ministry as the two provinces
are preparing to combine into one apostolic entity in 2014.
Together, they represent the provinces’ shared future, yet each
has uniquely received and responded to the call to religious
life.
Johnathan L. Brown, S.J., 35, was born and raised in the
southern Louisiana town of Eunice where his parents operate a rice and crawfish farm. The tenth of twelve children,
John attended St. Edmond’s Catholic grade school followed
by public high school. Though skilled in the operations of the
farm he thought he might become a commercial artist, and at
19 he moved to Houston to study art and graphic design at the
Art Institute of Houston. He took a job building websites and
ended up as a project manager, supervising graphic artists and
computer programmers.
Frequent business travel offered plenty of time for meditation and prayer. He reflected on the meaning of his life, and in
the midst of news about genocide and war he experienced a
growing desire to help improve the world.
4 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
John investigated the possibility of
a vocation with Rev. Marvin Kitten, S.J.,
and went on a discernment retreat. After
sharing in dinners and Masses with the
Strake Jesuit College Preparatory community in Houston, he entered the New
Orleans Province novitiate in 2002.
His novitiate experiments in Belize, Tampa and at Hope House in New
Orleans’ St. Thomas housing project
confirmed his vocation. He then went
on to complete philosophy studies at Saint Louis University
where he also worked in campus ministry, participated in service trips with students, was involved with the campus RCIA
program and learned Spanish.
During his regency, John worked in Villahermosa, Mexico, at San José Parish and with the youth groups at its 52 satellite chapels. He also taught theology at Jesuit High School in
Tampa where he served as defensive coach for junior varsity
football and linebacker trainer for the varsity team. He was
also moderator of the hunting and fishing club.
John completed the full course of studies at Boston College
School of Theology and Ministry, earning a master’s degree of
divinity and a master’s degree in theology. While in Boston he
worked at St. Columbkille Parish, but this summer he will move
to San Antonio to serve Our Lady of Guadalupe Church. He
will join the pastoral staff at Sacred Heart Parish in El Paso this
fall.
John will celebrate his Mass of Thanksgiving in Eunice at
St. Anthony of Padua Church on Sunday, June 5 at 6:00 p.m.
J. Patrick Hough, S.J., 36, has
lived within the world of Jesuits since
birth. His father manages the dairy on
the 400-year-old Jesuit estate of Stonyhurst College in Lancashire, England.
Patrick attended grade school and
high school at Stonyhurst and along
with his academics, he developed his
talents as a singer, conductor, organist
and athlete. After graduation he participated in a yearlong “gap” program
between high school and college where he taught geography
and math, coached tennis and was active in the music program
at St. Ignatius High School in Sidney, Australia. He felt called
to the priesthood, but teaching opportunities were limited for
Jesuits in England. Instead, the Diocese of Leeds, which also
had the largest youth music program in the United Kingdom,
accepted him as a seminarian.
He earned an undergraduate degree in geography at Leeds
University, followed by a bachelor’s degree in theology at the
Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. While studying an
additional year of theology at the Pontifical Angelicum University in Rome, he befriended a number of Jesuit scholastics
from the New Orleans Province. He accepted an invitation to
ordinations in New Orleans, and the sense of fellowship he
felt there rekindled his desire to become a Jesuit.
Patrick entered the novitiate in the New Orleans Province
in 2002, and his valuable novitiate experiments included service to Sacred Heart Parish in El Paso and teaching at Strake
Jesuit College Preparatory in Houston.
He then went on to earn a master’s degree in medieval
history at Fordham University where he was also music director of the Sunday evening student Mass at St. Paul Church
on Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus, and he took classes in
orchestral conducting and singing at the Juilliard School there.
For his regency, Patrick taught at Jesuit College Preparatory in Dallas where he also coached its rowing team. Afterward,
he earned his licentiate in sacred theology in liturgy from the
Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara University and served
as assistant coach of the freshman rowing team at the University of California.
This summer Patrick will work within a parish in England and will also serve as a chaplain at World Youth Day in
Madrid. In the fall, he will begin his first year as a priest at
Immaculate Conception Parish in Albuquerque.
Patrick will celebrate a Mass of Thanksgiving at
Immaculate Conception Parish in New Orleans on Sunday,
June 5 at 11:00 a.m. He will celebrate other Masses at: the
Cathedral of Christ the Light in Oakland, California, on
Sunday, June 19 at 10:00 a.m.; St. Rita Catholic Church in
Dallas on Saturday, July 2 at 5:30 p.m.; and the Boys’ Chapel
at Stonyhurst College on Saturday, July 9 at 5:30 p.m.
Jeffrey C. Johnson, S.J., 40,
served as a naval officer before becoming a Jesuit. Born on Signal Mountain
in Tennessee, he attended Holy Spirit
Catholic Church in the nearby town of
Soddy-Daisy. His parents are the third
generation to run a family flower business, and he and his siblings grew up
assisting with the business.
Jeff attended Vanderbilt University on a Naval ROTC scholarship and
earned a bachelor’s degree in English before serving five years
on a navy frigate. He felt a call to a religious vocation during
his undergraduate years, and after leaving the navy he attended the University of St. Mary of the Lake in Chicago to study
theology as a seminarian for the Diocese of Nashville. He was
acquainted with Jesuits at both Vanderbilt and the University
of St. Mary of the Lake, and he saw in Jesuit life and ministries a path he wanted to follow. He entered the Jesuit novitiate
of the New Orleans Province in 2001.
At Fordham University, he earned a master’s degree in
English literature and creative writing. He responded to a
bulletin board invitation seeking ideas for the celebration of
the 2006 Jesuit Jubilee, and for it he wrote and co-produced
the hour-long film Xavier which was narrated by actor Liam
Neeson, televised nationally on PBS and distributed to Jesuit
schools throughout the United States.
For his regency, Jeff taught English at Jesuit High School
in Tampa, served as chaplain of its baseball and soccer teams
and was moderator of the school newspaper. He also developed the school’s first advanced placement course in English
language and composition.
Jeff will soon receive his licentiate in sacred theology
from Boston College School of Theology and Ministry. He
will serve as associate pastor of Immaculate Conception Jesuit
Church in New Orleans.
Jeff will celebrate a Mass of Thanksgiving at Holy Spirit
Catholic Church in Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee, on Sunday, June
19 at 8:00 a.m.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 5
Formation
Andrew R.
Kirschman, S.J., 37,
grew up participating in
the life of Transfiguration Parish in the north
county suburbs of St.
Louis, Missouri. Drew
particularly loved playing sports, serving Mass,
Boy Scouts and Friday
night fish frys. He went on to attend high school at St. Louis Preparatory Seminary, but when the diocesan
school closed he transferred to Vianney High
School where his activities included cross-country, basketball, track, student council and theater.
Throughout his high school years, he worked
at St. Justin Martyr Parish helping with maintenance work, grass cutting and preparations of
the school and church grounds for the upcoming school year. He also spent a few weeks each
summer doing volunteer work, serving one summer on a Native American reservation in South
Dakota and another summer in Harlem, New
York, at a children’s bible camp. As a seminarian in the St. Louis Archdiocese at Cardinal Glennon Seminary, Drew
attended Saint Louis University and earned a
bachelor’s degree in philosophy and letters. After graduating from the university and the seminary, he worked for three years at Chaminade
Preparatory High School in St. Louis, teaching
theology, coaching cross-country, basketball and
track, and organizing a service program for the
middle school.
Upon entering the Jesuit novitiate in 2000 in
St. Paul, Minnesota, he earned a master’s degree
in public policy and urban affairs at Saint Louis
University.
He completed his regency at the
Universidad Centroamericana in San Salvador,
El Salvador. During his first year there he helped
in the law school while learning Spanish, and
for the next two years he taught sociology and
political science, worked with the youth group
at Las Palmas Parish and participated in its
sacramental life.
Drew completed theology studies at the Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara University where his apostolic work included ministering
to those incarcerated at juvenile and women’s
6 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
correctional facilities. He was ordained to the
diaconate last fall, and he received his master’s
of divinity this spring.
For the past three years Drew has also assisted with the formation of the Alum Service
Corps (ASC), a volunteer program in Missouri
Province high schools, as leader of its summer
boot camp and as spiritual guide of alum retreats
throughout the year.
Drew has been missioned to Arrupe Jesuit
High School in Denver for the coming fall
where he will teach, assist in the recruitment
and admission of new students and participate
in the ongoing Ignatian formation of students,
faculty and staff. In addition, he will seek to
build relationships with the Latino community
in the Denver area for future initiatives and will
continue his work with the ASC.
Drew will celebrate Masses of Thanksgiving at St. Francis Xavier (College) Church in St.
Louis on Sunday, June 12 at 10:30 a.m. and at
St. John the Evangelist Church in St. Louis on
Sunday, June 19 at 10:30 a.m.
Joseph W. Laramie,
S.J., 33, grew up in
Sacred Heart Parish in
Florissant, Missouri. He
first considered a religious
vocation during his years
at St. Louis University
High School where he
was inspired by the
example of the Jesuits
who taught there and by
his experience as a retreat leader for the school’s
first Kairos retreat.
He completed undergraduate work at Saint
Louis University while a seminarian at the St.
Louis Archdiocese Cardinal Glennon Seminary. Majoring in philosophy and letters, he
befriended the Jesuit scholastics who were his
classmates and was drawn by their goodness,
holiness and brotherhood.
After graduating from the university in
2000, he entered the Jesuit novitiate in St. Paul,
Minnesota. The highlight of his novitiate was
his long experiment at Rockhurst High School in
Kansas City where he assisted teachers, taught
classes and helped with service projects and
retreats.
Joe studied theology and Spanish at Loyola University
of Chicago, took improv classes with the Second City theater
program and continued special studies at Saint Louis University to earn his master’s degree in communications.
He completed his regency at Regis Jesuit High School
in Denver where he taught public speaking, journalism and
sophomore and senior spirituality classes. He was also moderator of the improv club and the school newspaper.
His interest in pro-life work has often taken him to Washington, D.C., where he serves as a group leader for the March
for Life every January. He has also served as master of ceremonies for the Ignatian Spirituality Conference in St. Louis, and he
will do so again this July.
He earned his master’s degree of divinity this spring at the
Boston College School of Theology and Ministry, and he will
return to Boston in the fall to finish course work toward his
licentiate in sacred theology.
Joe will celebrate Masses of Thanksgiving at Sacred Heart
Church in Florissant on Sunday, June 12 at 10:30 a.m. and in
the school chapel of Regis Jesuit High School in Denver on
Sunday, July 31 at 10:30 a.m.
Aaron D. Pidel, S.J., 32, grew up
in the Alleluia Community, a Christian
charismatic group in Augusta, Georgia, where he and his siblings attended
the community’s schools. After high
school graduation, Aaron attended a
state school his freshman year before
transferring to Franciscan University in
Steubenville, Ohio, to major in humanities and Catholic culture.
Aaron’s initial curiosity of theology
came from reading the history of the Catholic Reformation.
He was particularly interested in great Jesuit missionaries, and
as he read about these Jesuits his desire to serve and respond
to God grew generously. He completed an eight-day Ignatian
retreat which confirmed his love of Jesuit spirituality, and after
attending a Jesuit ordination the following summer he entered
the Jesuit novitiate in the New Orleans Province in August of
2000.
The most transformative experiences of his formation as
a Jesuit occurred during his novitiate while working with the
L’Arche Community in Mobile, Alabama, and then with a parish youth group in El Salvador.
During philosophy studies at Fordham University, he
came to more deeply understand and articulate the harmony of
faith and reason. During this time he took an intensive summer course in classical Greek, having in mind and honoring
the mastery of Latin and Greek in the traditional formation of
Jesuits.
For his regency, Aaron taught the classics, coached soccer
and led the retreat program at Jesuit High School in New Orleans. When Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in August
of 2005, he spent a semester with his New Orleans students at
Strake Jesuit College Preparatory in Houston.
His studies at Boston College School of Theology and
Ministry have confirmed his desire to continue theology
studies. He will soon receive his master’s degree of divinity
and a licentiate in theology, and after ordination Aaron will
teach and offer spiritual direction to diocesan seminarians at
the Institute of Priestly Formation at Creighton University
in Omaha, Nebraska. In August, he will serve as a chaplain
at World Youth Day in Madrid, and this fall he will work as
parochial vicar of Gesu Parish in Miami.
Aaron’s Mass of Thanksgiving will be at the Chapel of
the North American Martyrs at Jesuit High School in New Orleans on Sunday, June 5 at 9:00 a.m. He will celebrate another
Mass at Most Holy Trinity Church in Augusta, Georgia, on
Sunday, June 12 at 12:30 p.m.
Paul H. Vu, S.J., 40, attempted to
flee Vietnam with his family on April
30, 1975, the day Saigon fell. Five
year old Paul, his mother, and a brother
and sister, separated in the melee from
the rest of the family, made it out of
the country. Sadly, five years later, his
father and two sisters were killed at sea
in an attempt to escape. The rest of his
family has made it to the United States
over time, and today this “extremely”
Catholic family is very happy to have, after three generations,
a priest within its fold once again.
The Vus lived in New Orleans for a few years before settling in Costa Mesa, California, where Paul attended St. John
the Baptist Elementary School. He knew from an early age
he wanted to be a priest, and during recess he would listen to
“confessions” and preside over “weddings” where he would
give the groom permission to kiss the bride.
In 1983, the family moved to Houston to open a restaurant and seafood market. Paul attended St. Thomas High
School, run by the Basilian Fathers, and was voted “Most
Likely to Become a Priest.” He was awarded a scholarship to
the University of Texas where he earned a bachelor’s degree
in psychology. Coming from a Catholic cocoon, his exposure
to the larger world of university life was challenging, but he
found a spiritual home at the Newman Catholic Center on
campus. After graduation, he received a full scholarship to the
University of Missouri where he earned master and doctoral
degrees in counseling psychology.
In 1997, Paul attended World Youth Day in Paris with
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 7
Formation
his sister. Upon returning he began to
receive spiritual direction as he explored
a vocation to the priesthood, and he
entered the Jesuit novitiate in St. Paul,
Minnesota, in August of 2000.
For his first novitiate experiment he
was sent to work at the Jesuit infirmary
in Los Gatos, California, and in the
second year of his novitiate he served at
Rockhurst University in Kansas City as
a counselor and campus minister.
Paul completed philosophy studies
in St. Louis, and for the regency period
of his formation he was assigned to
Regis University in Denver where he
worked as a counselor on the campus,
taught part time and coordinated the
university Christian Life Community
program.
He is currently completing his
theology studies at the Jesuit School
of Theology at Santa Clara University
where he is also a pastoral minister
at San Francisco General Hospital.
Ordained to the diaconate last fall, he
preaches at St. Leo’s Church in Oakland,
California.
After serving this coming summer
at St. Francis Xavier Church in Kansas
City, he will return to Berkeley to finish
his licentiate in sacred theology and to
continue his study of the relationship
between psychology and religion.
Paul will celebrate Masses of
Thanksgiving at the DeSmet Jesuit High
School Chapel on Sunday, June 12 at
10:00 a.m. and at Vietnamese Martyrs
Catholic Church in Houston the following Saturday, June 18 at 6:00 p.m.
To learn more about the formation
of Jesuits or to support their journey,
visit www.norprov.org.
8 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
A Jesuit in New
Orleans by Way of
Kansas City
Though a native of Kansas City, Missouri,
and a member of the Missouri Province, few
Jesuits have given quite so much to the collegiate academic community of New Orleans
as Rev. Lawrence Moore, S.J. Ordained to the
priesthood after earning his Master of Divinity in 1977, Fr. Moore has earned an
undergraduate degree in philosophy and classics, a Juris Doctor from the University of Missouri at Kansas City, and three master degrees including urban affairs,
divinity and law.
Once reaching the other side of the desk, he has taught everything from high
school social studies to university-level statistics and has been a professor of law
at Loyola since 1982. He describes his early days as a rookie professor, teaching
both morning and evening classes “like being on a treadmill.” Moore has the right
stamina, as 29 years later he is still teaching, though he now does so as the Brooks
Distinguished Professor of Law. He estimates that he has taught over 5,000 students and feels that he demonstrates to his students that he is thorough, clear and
maintains a high academic standard.
In addition to teaching, Moore has served as the associate dean for academic
affairs since 2001. In this role he reaches out to his law students on both a personal
and academic level. “Cura Personalis is my day to day job as associate dean,” he
says. Though it can feel like a juggling act at times, it is a challenge that he enjoys.
Outside of his academic work, Fr. Moore has also served on the Loyola University of New Orleans Board of Trustees since 1985 and on several of its committees including executive, endowment, audit, finance and, of course, legal. He
currently serves on the Trusteeship Committee, as well as acting as secretary and
treasurer.
In his capacity as a man for others, Moore has over seven years of experience as the rector of the Jesuit community at Loyola and, as the only Jesuit in the
School of Law, he has the opportunity to lead prayers at gatherings and events. Off
campus, Fr. Moore is involved in sacramental ministry, officiating at a half dozen
weddings a year, as well as leading the weekly Mass at the John J. Hainkel, Jr.
Home & Rehabilitation Center.
After almost three decades as a Jesuit in New Orleans he feels that he is
still an effective teacher, and reveals “The students seem to like me more now.”
Fortunately, Moore will indeed be given the opportunity to keep teaching as he
takes on the night sections of Civil Procedure next year. It is unclear whether he
will remain associate dean, as the school has appointed a new dean, but Moore is
optimistic. Looking back, he says “I have done exactly what I wanted to do, and I
feel very satisfied.” He also notes, “I have no idea where the 29 years have gone!”
Second-year novice Penn Dawson
in the remote village of
Karasabai in Guyana
Testing and Experimenting:
Life in the Novitiate
A scientist who has an idea that he wants to test runs to
his laboratory. There he applies various tests to see whether
his initial idea was a sound one. Some people use the laboratory analogy to try to explain the novitiate experience, and in
many ways a “lab” is an accurate analogy for this first stage in
Jesuit formation.
When a man enters the novitiate, he has a good idea that
God is calling him to become a Jesuit – he has discerned and
spent many hours in the application process being interviewed
by Jesuits, doctors and even a psychologist – but he has never
lived as a Jesuit; he has not yet tested his vocation. Likewise,
the Society of Jesus has a good idea that the man they have
admitted is a good fit, but it needs some real life experiences
with this man to know for sure. The novitiate is this time of
testing and discernment.
One of the reasons a laboratory is a good analogy for the
novitiate is because St. Ignatius designed the novitiate to have
specific tests which are called “experiments.” No, novices are
not asked to deliver electric shocks to one another, nor does
the novice master ring a bell before meals and measure salivation. Instead, the various experiments, many conceived by
Ignatius himself, test whether a novice can do what Jesuits do
and live as Jesuits live.
The first experiment is arguably the most important – the
undertaking of the full 30 day Spiritual Exercises of St. Igna-
tius. In this powerful and moving experience, a novice moves
through the retreat, seeking to know and follow Christ more
closely and to more clearly hear His voice in his life. He will
draw on this experiment for the rest of his Jesuit life.
In our novitiate, the experiment that follows the Long
Retreat is the “Primi Class Experiment.” All of the first year
novices, called primi, go to Kansas City, Kansas, to work in a
variety of ministries and to work on building a stronger sense
of community. This year the primi worked in parishes, schools
and a hospital. In addition they worked with Burmese refugees
who have been granted asylum by the US government and
with the Turnaround Program, a program which seeks to help
recently released prisoners get their feet on the ground in their
new life.
Next, for the Pilgrimage Experiment, the novice master
hands each novice $5 and a one-way bus ticket to a destination, different for each novice. Ignatius thought it was important for all novices to understand the importance of begging
for what one needs – food, shelter, transportation – as he did
in his own life, going from his home in Spain to Jerusalem
shortly after his conversion. On pilgrimage, the novice “[puts]
all hope in the Creator and Lord and accept[s] sleeping poorly
and eating badly because it seems to us that the one who cannot live and walk for a day without eating or sleeping poorly
cannot persevere long in our Society.”[*] The journey depends
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 9
Formation
First-year novices lead singing at Mass during a teen retreat.
Primi novices talk on the life of St. Ignatius and the Spiritual Exercises
to a high school retreat group.
The novitiate is this time o
Novice group with Fr. Dan White, the assistant novice director,
atop a volcanic lake in Nicaragua
Novices with the retreat group in Kansas City
10 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
on the grace that he is praying for in his spiritual life or that he
received during the Exercises or on a particular challenge the
novice master believes that man needs.
Ignatius tells us that it is important for a novice to work in
a hospital, caring for the needs of the people there. In Ignatius’
day, this was by far the most grueling experiment because unlike
today hospitals were large places which held those for whom no
one else would care – those at the edges of society, the poor, the
mentally or physically disabled and the dying.
Today, novices find themselves working in the infirmaries
of the New Orleans and Missouri Provinces and places similar
in character and work to the hospitals in Ignatius’ day. They also
work at Good Shepherd or Loyola Academy “Nativity” schools in
New Orleans and St. Louis, l’Arche communities or the inner city
of East St. Louis, among others.
In the fall of his second year, each novice undertakes the
Jesuit Experiment, designed to give each novice an experience of
living in a Jesuit community while working at a Jesuit apostolate,
living the sort of life he would lead were he to take vows and
continue on in Jesuit life. Many novices find themselves in Jesuit
high schools, however some end up in Jesuit universities or other
locations.
During the Long Experiment that follows, each man is assigned to a location for three months to work in a community,
Novices prepare to set off on their pilgrimage, one of the first-year
novitiate experiments.
Second-year novice Matthew Stewart with his host family in
Managua, Nicaragua, during a Spanish immersion experience
of testing and discernment.
usually in the developing world. Novices have gone to distant locations like Guyana in South America, Guatemala, Honduras, Belize and St. Francis Mission on the Rosebud Reservation in South
Dakota. It is of utmost importance that novices experience the
various kinds of poverty that exist in the world and learn to identify with those who are most vulnerable. This experiment provides
such exposure. Also, in the longer timeframe of this experiment, a
novice ideally can plug in to the life of a community better than in
the shorter experiments, and he can more deeply and more richly
experience the life and work of the Jesuits in that location.
After his many tests, the scientist can come to a conclusion
about his initial observations – the same holds true for the Jesuit
novice. After the successful conclusion of the experiments, much
prayer and discernment, and with the permission of the novice
master and provincial, the hopeful novice is approved to profess the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience in the Society
of Jesus. Even though he has no need for a lab coat, graduated
cylinders, or mass spectrometers, a man who enters the novitiate
readies himself for the testing that happens in this initial “laboratory” of Jesuit life.
[*] José Ignacio Idigoras, Ignatius of Loyola, the Pilgrim
Saint, trans. C. Michael Buckley, S.J. (Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1994), 456.
Second-year novice David Lugo at the gate of Santa Maria
Chiquimula in Guatamala
Second-year novice Penn Dawson trucks to the remote villages
around Karasabai in Guyana.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 11
Ministries
T
aking final vows
in the Society of
Jesus reminded
me of something
Yogi Berra of the
New York Yankees
once said, “It’s
déjà vu all over
again.” Well in
some ways it was
just that but a lot
more, much more.
Even though we Jesuits take first vows
after two years in the novitiate, we
still remain officially in formation
up until the time we are invited to
take final vows (sometime after
ordination and tertianship). Although
the process of formation can seem
long and cumbersome to some
observers, without a doubt each and
every phase contributes to the overall
spiritual formation of the Jesuit. Of
course with a longer formation period
also come the opportunities for selfawareness and hopefully experience and
wisdom.
I explained final vows
to my parishioners, some of
whom thought I was being
ordained as a priest! Think
of it as the Society of Jesus
saying to itself, “You know
we’ve had this fellow, Ron
Gonzales, with us for about
18 years. Why not keep
him?” When I took my first
vows back in 1994, my intention and hope was to continue
in the formation process until
such time when the Society
would say, “We, too, fully
accept you.” Being fully accepted as a
Jesuit is truly a great feeling of belonging and completion, in spite of my human weakness.
There is also a keen sense of humility knowing that our superiors and our
Jesuit companions are quite aware of
both our strengths and weaknesses. I
liken it to a marriage covenant between
spouses in which each one feels a peace
and acceptance knowing that there is a
commitment as well as an acceptance
of one another, no matter what happens. Perhaps some in academia would
appreciate another analogy, namely that
of tenure. We recognize the work and
effort that precedes tenure, yet we know
the hard work continues long after final
vows and even after retirement age. It
is not a time to “rest on our laurels” as
there is much work to be done.
Another feeling for me was one of
Fr. Ron Gonzales pronounces his final vows
to Provincial Mark Lewis.
where
y’at?
with
Rev. Ron Gonzales, S.J.
12 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
poignancy, in that the stages leading towards final vows are officially complete.
One of the things I loved especially
during these 17 years of formation was
looking forward to the next stage, such
as philosophy studies in Chicago immediately after novitiate. In each stage
I knew that I would have wonderful and
challenging experiences, live in a differ-
ent city, meet new and interesting people
(some of whom are still close friends),
and then after three years move on to yet
another experience. While it is true that I
still fondly remember some stages more
so than others, I can say that each one
was integral in shaping the Jesuit priest
I am today.
It was during formation, for example, that I realized that perhaps the high
school apostolate was not the best fit
for me (even though I was a reasonably
successful high school teacher for three
years prior to entering the Jesuits).
Still, this change in ministerial direction would not have occurred were it
not for the variety of experiences and
possibilities briefly explored during
my formation. Most men come to
the Jesuits with an idea as to what
they will do as Jesuits. Inevitably
Jesuit formation opens us to serving
in many capacities. Part of Jesuit “detachment” and “availability” invites
us to be completely flexible and open
to other ministries, even if they initially
are not appealing. God surprises us
where we would never expect to find
Him.
Because “finding God in all
things” is essential in reflecting on
all experiences, both good and bad,
throughout formation, it is quite
clear that the Lord had an even better ministerial fit in mind for me:
pastoral work. Since ordination in
2003, I have worked exclusively
in the parish apostolate in various
parishes starting with Immaculate
Conception in Albuquerque, Sacred
Heart in El Paso, Our Lady of the
Sioux in Pine Ridge, South Dakota,
and finally now as pastor at Our Lady of
Guadalupe in San Antonio.
Each day is different – filled with
meetings, funerals, confessions, daily
masses, hospital visits, counseling and
surprises that inevitably come up. It
is unpredictable, but the fact that we
have three priests and one brother, all
of whom use their talents generously,
makes the work load manageable. We each have a passion for
areas outside of the parish as well,
with pro-life issues, community
organizing, social justice issues,
participating on boards for America
Magazine or Hope for the Future, to
Being fully
accepted as a
Jesuit is truly
a great feeling
of belonging
and completion,
in spite of
my human
weakness.
name a few. Single-priest parishes
often call us to help them out on the
weekends, and usually we are called
on for hearing confessions after the
popular ACTS Retreats held nearly
every week. We have a small Jesuit
community, but we enjoy our work
and each other’s company.
Who knows what the future
holds for those still in Jesuit formation? But, regardless we can trust
that the Lord has brought us this
far and has never abandoned us.
It is through complete trust in the
Lord that we will serve Him as He
desires. His love and His Grace are
enough for me.
A Pilgrim’s Progress
The journey of one novice
I began my journey on a
Greyhound bus from Kansas City
the night of February 21st. My
ticket took me to Schenectady,
New York, which was 30 miles
from the Jesuit Martyrs Shrine
where I had hoped to stay my
first night. The bus ride took 32
hours, and I begged for food and
money from others I met on the
bus.
In Schenectady I walked
around trying to find a place
to stay the night. A priest at a
local parish donated $50 to my
cause and told me about a bus
that would take me closer to my
destination. So I took the bus to Amsterdam,
New York, where I asked for walking directions
to the shrine from a postal worker. After the
eight mile, two and a half hour hike, I was
exhausted, hungry, and plagued with blisters.
I embraced a relaxing, meditative two and a
half days at the shrine where I visited the site
of René Goupil’s martyrdom.
I then took a train to Rochester where I
stayed a night at McQuaid Jesuit High School
and ate dinner at a homeless shelter. Before
giving all the rest of my money to the homeless
shelter, I bought a bus ticket that took me to
Toronto to meet up with the director of the Martyrs’ Shrine in Midland, Ontario. Unfortunately,
I missed him but had the pleasure of staying
the night with the scholastics in first studies
at Regis College.
The next day I arrived by bus in Midland
where I stayed for five days, reflecting on my
vocation and spending time praying with the
relics of the Canadian Martyrs and learning
about their lives. Then I returned to Toronto for
several days to figure out my next move which
led me to take an overnight bus to New York
City.
I arrived in New York early in the morning
and took the subway to the Jesuit scholastic
residence at Fordham in the Bronx. After get-
ting settled, I took the subway back to America
House in Manhattan where I had lunch and
met Fr. James Martin, S.J., whom I find inspiring and would like to emulate. I walked around
Manhattan after lunch visiting St. Patrick’s
Cathedral, Times Square and St. Ignatius
Church.
The next day led me to Baltimore. I was
welcomed with a 50 degree “heat wave” and
a ten mile walk. After three hours of walking I
arrived in the office of the campus minister of
Loyola Blakefield who graciously welcomed me
into his home. I stayed at his house visiting
the school for two days. I had the pleasure of
speaking to several senior theology classes,
and students donated enough for my bus ticket
to New Orleans. I visited the Cristo Rey school
in Baltimore on my last day there and took a
late-night bus on the 11th of March. I didn’t
arrive in New Orleans until the morning of the
13th, but I had a seven-hour layover in Atlanta
which I used to explore the downtown area.
This pilgrimage was an incredibly humbling experience overall that really taught me
how to trust in God and confirmed me in my
vocation. I am thankful to have had such a
wonderful opportunity.
If you would like to support the formation
of young Jesuits, please visit us at www.
norprov.org.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 13
Ministries
Architect’s sketch of
Strake Jesuit’s new
Retreat and Leadership
Center
Jesuit High Schools Mark Milestones
and Welcome New Leaders
O
to accomplish as a school community over the last fifty years,
and I am excited to build on our proud history and embark
on future projects.” He adds, “Our next, very exciting project
is the Retreat and Leadership Center (RLC) we are currently
building. I am confident that this new enterprise will have a
lasting impact on the school and how we fulfill our mission.”
Located on 62 acres of land and less than two hours from
campus, the RLC will welcome its first guests in 2012 and
will serve as a second home for students, faculty and alumni.
Strake Jesuit College Preparatory
www.strakejesuit.org
This academic year Strake celebrates 50 years of teaching
and shaping young men to live and work for the greater glory
of God. Founded in 1960 by the late Rev. Michael Kennelly,
S.J., the school has now graduated over 6,400 young men
from the Greater Houston area. Along with the special 50th
Anniversary Celebration held on campus on May 7, 2011,
one of the most exciting projects Strake Jesuit developed for
this special year was a coffee table-style book entitled We Are
SJ!, filled with stories and pictures detailing the history of the
school. President Rev. Daniel Lahart, S.J., says, “Of course I
am proud of what so many Jesuits and friends have been able
Cristo Rey Jesuit College Preparatory School of Houston
www.cristoreyjesuit.org
As the province’s newest educational addition, Cristo
Rey Jesuit has shown an extraordinary amount of progress
in less than two years. It officially opened its doors in August 2009 to a freshman class of just over 80 young men and
women. Today it has nearly doubled that number. The Houston community has taken notice, and support has been steadily
growing. On January 29, 2011, the school hosted its inaugural
gala, aptly named “Defying Gravity,” which was attended by
1,200 guests, including students and their families as well as
supporters old
and new. The
event helped
to raise an astounding $1.8
million, which
President Rev.
T.J. Martinez,
S.J., hopes to
Fr. T.J. Martinez addresses the class of 2014.
ne of the most important endeavors for
the Society of Jesus has always been
support of education. Since our foundations were laid by St. Ignatius over
450 years ago, the Jesuits have been
renowned the world over for excellence
in education. Currently, the Jesuits
maintain 70 secondary and primary schools and 28 universities and colleges in the United States. The Jesuits of the New
Orleans Province support and maintain eight of these institutions: two universities, five high schools and one Nativity
Mission School.
As 2011 unfolds, we are pleased to share the tremendous
progress and success at each of our academic institutions,
particularly our secondary schools which continue the Ignatian
tradition of forming people for others.
14 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
put to good use on the expansion of the
academic and work-study programs so
integral to the Cristo Rey model. He also
hopes to renovate the existing school
building, as well as add a community
center on campus. What do the students
think of all this success? Sophomore student Terrell Steed says, “Here, so many
people care for us and Father Martinez
has put the school out there. It encourages me to do better in school. People
are counting on us as the first graduating
class of Cristo Rey Jesuit.”
Jesuit College Preparatory
School of Dallas
www.jesuitcp.org
As the school gears up to celebrate
its 70th year, JCP also celebrates two
major staff appointments. Principal
Michael
Earsing
will soon
lead as
president, and
Thomas
E. Garrison will
serve as
prinThomas Garrison and Michael
cipal.
After 14 Earsing, the new principal and
president of JCP, respectively
years
as principal, Earsing is excited to take
on the challenge of presidential duties,
and he feels confident that his successor, Garrison, “brings a wide range of
outstanding skills to the job of principal,
most notably innovation and creativity
in the areas of curriculum and academic
student services.” An alumnus of Jesuit
College Prep (’92), Garrison has served
as a member of the school faculty since
1997. He began by teaching English and
was awarded the Tehan Family Award
for excellence in education in 2000, an
honor bestowed on him by his fellow
faculty members. Three years later, Garrison was made assistant principal for
academics.
Both Earsing and Garrison will
assume their new roles on July 1, 2011,
when the school bids a fond farewell to
current president, Rev. Philip Postell, S.J.
Jesuit High School of Tampa
www.jesuittampa.org
Fr. Richard Hermes presents Barry
Neuburger as Jesuit Tampa’s new principal.
JHS Tampa is very proud to announce the selection of Barry J. Neuburger as its new principal. A native
of New Orleans, Mr. Neuburger has
over 30 years of experience in Catholic
secondary education, including 10 years
at Jesuit High School of New Orleans,
from 1991-2001. Since then, he has been
busy not only founding but also acting
as principal of Our Lady of the Hills
Regional Catholic School in Kerrville,
Texas. “Throughout his career, Barry
Neuburger has shown himself to be an
outstanding Jesuit educator and a true
leader in Catholic secondary education,”
says President Rev. Richard Hermes,
S.J. “His decade of experience at Jesuit
High of New Orleans, four years in
the classroom and six as principal, has
given him a sure grasp of Jesuit education from the inside and the knowledge
of what it takes to deepen and advance
the Ignatian identity of a contemporary
Jesuit high school.”
Jesuit High School of New Orleans
www.jesuitnola.org
At 164 years and counting, JHS
New Orleans has seen many changes.
This year will bring yet another
exciting development as it moves
into the future with a new president at
its helm. As President Rev. Anthony
McGinn, S.J., becomes the provincial
assistant for secondary education, the
role of president will be filled by Rev.
Raymond Fitzgerald, S.J. A 1976 Blue
Jay alumnus, Fitzgerald has served as
socius to the provincial for over three
years, and during that time has lived
and occasionally ministered at JHS.
He says, “It is very encouraging to see
the seriousness and zeal with which so
many Jesuit students and alumni strive
to find and act upon God’s will for their
lives.”
Looking back on his time as socius,
Fr. Fitzgerald feels lucky to have served
two fine provincials and to have worked
with “a dedicated and selfless province
staff of Jesuits and lay colleagues.” He
looks forward to his new appointment
and says, “As I prepare to move to a
new assignment as president at Jesuit
High School in New Orleans, I find
myself likewise moved with gratitude…
I am honored and humbled by the trust
placed in me by the board of directors of
the school. Moreover, I am thankful to
the provincial for making me available
to accept this ministry.”
Fr. Raymond Fitzgerald celebrates Mass at
Jesuit High School where he will become
president at the end of the current school year.
It is truly an exciting time for our
schools! Please be sure to visit our website at www.norprov.org, as well as the
websites of our schools, to keep up with
news and developments.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 15
Missions
Frs. Michael Gallagher
and Ken Johnson enjoy
some time together visiting
Victoria Falls in Zambia.
On the Frontier with
Rev. Dr. O. Kenneth
Johnson, S.J.
Healing and
Helping
our Brothers and Sisters
As a young man I had met several priests (Jesuit and non- doctors with whom I remain friends today and to get acquainted with the expected standards of care in a recognizable but
Jesuit) who inspired me with their lives of generous service,
somewhat different environment. For several years afterwards
putting their considerable talents wholly at the service of
I went to explore work in a Catholic mission hospital so as to
others. But it was a few Jesuits who helped me pray through
understand the distinctive service Catholic hospitals provide.
the Spiritual Exercises that crystallized my desire to enter the
Then I returned to the University Hospital and subsequently
Society – largely to grow in the prayerful search for God’s
to a district general hospital contributing to the teaching of
will and to grow in understanding of how I could more fully
medical students, registrars (residents in training) and cliniand more generously cooperate with it. This desire was there
cal officers (physician assistants). In these different settings I
for a long time, but it slowly developed as I matured through
studies in adolescence and as a young man. I
was able to help many sick patients. I was
also very fortunate to network with sisters,
completed medical studies before I was able
brothers and priests and found that I could
to enter the Society and for some time thought
I might leave that work behind as a new life deassist them and their families. Although I do
not celebrate the sacraments in the hospital, I
veloped within the Society. During the years of
have found many opportunities for ministry
formation in the Society, my superiors helped
in parishes and in retreat work. I have found
me to search for new ways of putting to good
that I have quite enough leisure to be of help
use the experiences I had already had – and I
became associated briefly with several medical
in spiritual direction over these many years.
During the last 10 years of work in a district
schools for brief periods, moving to different
general hospital, I was able to source some
places and meeting different persons as is the
custom of a Jesuit scholastic. After ordination I
funds to effect major improvements of the
equipment of the hospital for the surgical
had expected to return to a medical school, but
theatre, for the ablution blocks and for the
I was given the mandate to go to Zambia. That
was in February 1993.
laundry. By some unexpected providential
meetings, I began hosting a series of interMy first assignment in Zambia was at the
University Teaching Hospital in Lusaka – a
national students who came to get a month’s
sense of medical work in an African setting.
placement that was very providential since I
Dr. Ken Johnson, S.J., at the door
In these last years I was feeling more
had the opportunity to meet many fine young
of one of the hospitals he serves.
16 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
and more settled into what had become a familiar environment
of work and prayer. I enjoyed my work in the district general
hospital, and I enjoyed living with the Jesuit community in
a minor secondary school the Society had been running on
behalf of several dioceses. Eventually the minor seminary was
handed over to the local diocese and the Jesuit community was
reassigned. I was wondering if the Spirit was going to help
me grow in the same place or if there might be something new
for me as well. Things were changing in the Jesuit Province –
and eventually the winds of change blew into my life.
The Jesuit Province here includes both Zambia and
Malawi. Jesuits have had a much longer tradition of works in
Zambia, but there have been desires to expand our efforts in
Malawi. And there are several new ventures which are quite
exciting. We had been given a parish in Kasungu about 10
years ago – where the parish priests have been able to help the
Catholic community grow (the parish has about 90 – yes ninety – outstations). Some of the development efforts have included re-building about 13 primary schools, and the province
has committed to beginning a new Jesuit secondary school
(coeducational, boarding and day scholars). The province is
also beginning a new social apostolate center in Lilongwe.
The Jesuit Refugee Service is active in Dzaleka near Lilongwe
and runs educational programs for the camp – including a new
venture in on-line distance education (a project supported by
the American Jesuit universities). I was asked to join the Jesuit
community there and see where I might contribute to medical services. I would still say I miss my old friends, but I am
happy to be part of a new Jesuit effort.
Much to my surprise I found after my arrival in Malawi
that its Ministry of Health preferred me to move to Blantyre
and pick up work at the Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital
where the University of Malawi College of Medicine is situated. At the end of this first year, I continue the same work of
clinical care for a ward of surgical patients and teaching of
the medical students, interns, registrars and clinical officers.
This academic environment is a big switch for me from my
recent community general hospital, but it is familiar enough
from previous experiences. It is quite a privilege to be able to
help the young students develop and get ready to assume the
leadership of medical care in their country.
I am assigned for now to live in a diocesan parish – one
parish priest and the auxiliary bishop are residents there. I am
invited to participate in the liturgies of the parish and I find it a
very good and prayerful environment. Our parish has received
many benefactions from the Friends of Medjugorje, and we
have an outdoor Way of the Cross and Way of the Rosary
which are frequented by several visiting pilgrimage groups. It
is a diocese where many diocesan priests visit our house, and I
enjoy gradually getting acquainted with many of them. Jesuits
are not well known in this diocese, and I am happy to be one
Fr. Johnson, S.J., M.D., relies on the truck provided him by stateside
donations.
sent to contribute a little bit to the diocese.
I entered the Society because I was captivated by Ignatius’
confidence in praying to know the will of God and to work to
more generously fulfill it. I find that through these many years
I have been able to adapt to changing assignments because
my fellow Jesuits have been there for me to help me pray and
keep searching for the interior freedom to move with changing circumstances and to keep searching for God’s will. I have
been able to share my own journey with others in the province
and to be part of others’ journeys within the Jesuit Province
here in Zambia and Malawi. I hadn’t expected the assignment
to go to Zambia several years ago, but today I say thanks very
much for it – God has worked many things for good.
If you would like to find out more about the international
missions or to help support our work, please visit us at www.
norprov.org.
Ignatian Pro-Life Network Mass and Rally for Life
Magis 2011: August 5-15, Madrid, Spain
World Youth Day 2011:
August 16-21, Madrid, Spain
For more information on these events, please visit
http://apostleshipofprayer.org/worldYouthDay.html or
contact Fr. Phil Hurley, S.J., Youth and Young Adult Director
at the Apostleship of Prayer National Office at 414-486-1152.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 17
Senior Jesuits
A Mathematician for Christ
Rev. Andrew Whitman, S.J., has
door,” referring to the physical property
both a brilliant mathematical mind and
boundary shared by Tulane and Loyola
a humble, gracious spirit, two qualities
Universities.
not so commonly held by one person.
His plan was stifled by tuberculosis,
And, after 85 years, his memory is
then considered an incurable disease.
sharp. Reflecting on his many memoHe contracted the illness his senior
ries, he says, “It’s a mystery how the
year, and doctors informed him that its
Lord leads our lives.”
severity only gave him two remaining
The latest of these life-defining
years of life. He could not enter the
moments is his Pro Ecclesia et PontiJesuit novitiate with such a diagnosis,
fice Cross, the award recently bestowed so he instead chose to earn his master’s
upon Fr. Whitman by Pope Benedict
degree in hydro-engineering from LouiXVI in gratitude for three decades of
siana State University. Upon compleservice to the Vatican Observatory. The tion, he was offered a position at Tulane
Cross of Honour, as it is often called,
University to teach all of the incoming
was established and first awarded by
students; classrooms were full of returnPope Leo XIII in 1888. It is one of the
ing soldiers and volunteers.
highest honors awarded to clergy and
Then out of the blue, his diseased
religious, and the highest of honors giv- lung collapsed and took with it all the
en to the laity, for distinguished service bacterial germs of his malady, curto the Catholic Church.
ing him of tuberculosis and relieving
Fr. Whitman’s remarkable journey
him of its impending death sentence.
reads like a great work of fiction. It
He approached the Jesuits once again.
begins in Detroit, then helpless in the
Examination after examination proved
Great Depression with bread lines,
that he was in fact free of illness, and
bank failures and unemployment. His
he officially entered the Society in
father was one of thousands left job1951, a 25-year-old man looking ahead
less, and with no work available the
to the gift of renewed life.
Whitman family began what was to be
Andy completed philosophy studan 18-month job search which eventuies at Spring Hill College followed by a
ally led them to New Orleans.
doctorate in mathematics from Catholic
Andy was seven when his family
University and a licentiate in sacred
arrived in New Orleans, and he attendtheology from Woodstock College. He
ed public elementary and secondary
schools. It was a highly-coveted scholarship awarded to the top two students
in a class numbering 522 that boosted
him into studies at Tulane University.
He enrolled in 1942, at the height of
World War II, and majored in civil
engineering. “We had no vacations,”
he recalls, adding that he completed his
undergraduate studies in just two years
and three months. “Building things
always attracted me,” he explains.
“But, I was always drawn to the priest- Fr. Andy Whitman chats with guests at a
reception honoring him.
hood, and the Jesuits were right next
18 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
Fr. Whitman is honored for his many years
of service to the Vatican Observatory.
was ordained a Jesuit priest in 1963 and
began tertianship teaching mathematics
next door to his alma mater at Loyola
University New Orleans.
As a young mathematician, his
intelligence and methods were impressive but intimidating to several of his
colleagues, so much so that Jesuit Provincial John Edwards encouraged him
to choose a job for himself that would
not limit his capabilities. He accepted a
position at the University of Houston,
where for seven years he served as a
professor of mathematics. But, “life became too easy,” he recalls, and in 1974
he left for life as a missionary in Brazil.
He spent time at the Pontificia
Universidade Catolica in Rio de Janeiro and at the Jesuit mission Centro
Kennedy in Campinas, Brazil, at a vocational school for adults. “Those were
glorious, wonderful years of teaching,”
he recalls. It was during this time that
he became an adjunct researcher for
the Vatican Observatory as well. But,
particularly memorable are his years
spent working in conjunction with
Franciscan sisters on the great Amazon. “River culture was another world,
and such a beautiful world,” he adds.
After 15 years in South America, Fr. Whitman returned to
the states to teach at the College of the Holy Cross for seven
years before turning 70 and retiring from classroom teaching
altogether. “Then, I went to the telescope,” he hints, referring
to the Vatican Observatory Research Group in Tucson, Arizona. He continued to work as a research scientist and administrator for 14 more years before resigning his position. “I felt
too old for the responsibility,” he candidly reveals.
But leaving the observatory has not led to retirement of
any kind. Currently a writer in residence at St. Charles College, Fr. Whitman is penning a book on Lie algebra (an algebraic structure used in the study of geometric objects) to, as he
explains it, “initiate people into this natural mathematics.” He
also continues to meet with the Clavius Group of Mathematicians which he co-established with Rev. Larry Conlon, S.J.,
while at Catholic University in 1963.
Now well established in its 49th year, Clavius Group
meets annually, for four weeks during the summer, to share
research and prayer. Its 30 members and their families hail
from several universities and countries. “Over all these years
it’s become like a family,” Fr. Whitman says of the relationships cultivated at group reunions. “I’ve baptized children,
celebrated weddings for them, and now I’m baptizing grandchildren,” he adds, illustrating how his mathematical research
and priestly ministry have been masterfully woven together. Of
this divine tapestry he repeats, “It is such a mystery,” perhaps
a mystery decoded in the words of an essay he once wrote,
“Experiencing mathematics, one experiences in a finite manner, Truth that is Good and Beautiful. And thus mathematics
can become a prayer.”
Fr. Whitman will celebrate 60 years as a Jesuit at this
year’s Jesuit Jubilee on Sunday, July 31, 2011.
Fr. Whitman receives the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice award presented to
him by Fr. José Funes, S.J. This is one of the highest honors awarded
to clergy and religious for distinguished service to the Holy Father
and the Catholic Church.
Exploring the Heavens
Rev. David Brown,
S.J. takes the expression
“shooting for the stars” to
new heights. A New Orleans
native, 44-year-old Brown has
devoted his life to studying
the heavens – both divine
and celestial. After earning
his B.S. in Physics from Texas
A&M University, he joined the
Society of Jesus in 1991. For the next decade he studied philosophy
at Fordham University and theology at the Weston Jesuit School of
Theology, until his ordination to the priesthood in 2002. Then, he
turned his attention to the celestial heavens by exploring the binary
interactions which might produce sub dwarf B (sdB) stars at different metallicities, with implications for the UV-upturn. What in the
world does that mean? “My research is in the area of what is called
stellar evolution; that is, studying how stars actually work – their
energy mechanisms, their evolution, and their fates. In particular, I
study what are known as binary stars, which are systems in which
there are two stars together instead of one,” Fr. Brown says.
Upon successful completion of his thesis on this subject in
2008, he was awarded a doctorate in astrophysics from the University of Oxford. At this time he was also assigned to the staff at the
Vatican Observatory in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, where he has been
working on the synthesis of stellar populations to model the ultraviolet excess in giant elliptical galaxies. After a break to fulfill his
tertianship in Salamanca, Spain, he returned to the Observatory in
April 2011 to continue his research.
Not surprisingly, Fr. Brown is also interested in the relationship between the divine and celestial worlds or, more precisely, the
relationship between faith and science. The Vatican Observatory
was, in fact, founded 120 years ago for exactly that reason. Pope Leo
XIII, continuing the efforts of Pope Gregory XIII over 300 years before,
was determined to counteract the longstanding accusations that the
Church harbors hostility toward science. To the contrary, through the
work of the Observatory the Church has demonstrated its true belief
that “‘faith and reason are like two wings on which the human spirit
rises to the contemplation of truth” (Fides et Ratio, Proemium).
As a member of the Vatican Observatory staff, Fr. Brown has
proven that he can be a man for others, while also embodying the
Church’s support of scientific studies. “In studying the cosmos and
man’s place in it, we are engaged in the pursuit of [scientific] truth,
but since all truth comes ultimately from God, it is also a way of
beholding something of God Himself, Who is the Truth,” he says. Over
the coming years, Fr. Brown will continue his research, and with the
support of both the scientific and faith communities there are sure to
be more stellar discoveries on the way from this Jesuit.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 19
Renewing a
Br. Larry Huck, S.J., Clerk
of the Work
we affirm that the work and ministry in Grand Coteau is important
The Southern Jesuit recently visited with Br. Larry Huck,
S.J., who has been appointed
Clerk of the Work by Fr. Mark
Lewis, S.J., to lead the efforts
to renovate St. Charles College. Br. Huck entered the
Society of Jesus in 1993 and
has taught at Jesuit High
Tampa and Jesuit High New
Orleans, his alma mater. We
are grateful that he took the
time out of what is already a
busy schedule to answer our inquiries.
You have been appointed “Clerk of the Work” by the
provincial. Help us understand in more modern terms
what that means for the renovations at St. Charles College?
It means that I will, on behalf of the provincial, oversee
the remodeling of St. Charles College. More specifically, I
will check to make sure the job is done correctly, according to
the plans, and make day-to-day decisions that come up during
construction. Part of the job is to make sure the provincial
is not bogged down in daily issues because he already has a
full-time job. Also, if a construction issue arises, I would help
resolve the issue.
Personally, what does the work being done at Grand
Coteau mean for you?
This project for me is special and humbling. What I have
been charged with in this project touches something that is
important and special to many Jesuits. I want as much as possible to make sure the character of the College is maintained,
made safe and can remain a place where Jesuits and retreatants
continue to experience God and God’s call for them.
Professionally, what skills and training do you bring to
the table to help you in your work?
Due to my experience as a master electrician, I have direct
knowledge of working in construction. In my work for the
family electrical business, I had to estimate projects, oversee
electrical projects from start to finish and oversee others working on electrical projects. Not only do I bring construction
experience, I have people and resources I can tap into if I have
questions.
20 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
Do you have goals for this project, and can you offer
us insight into them?
My goal would be that the job is done correctly and not
done cheaply. The College is a home to the Jesuits and a comfortable and quiet place where retreatants can easily converse
with God and Christ. Yet, I want it to be simple so that it fits
our way of life. Part of my job is to control costs and not
compromise quality of work that befits preserving this historic
and sacred building.
What does this work mean to the Province, its history
and its future?
This project ensures that the “family home” will be
preserved for many Jesuits who are to enter the Society in the
years to come. Many Jesuits’ lives were “born and nurtured”
in this building. Also, by committing to do this project, we
affirm that the work and ministry we do in Grand Coteau is
important and valued.
What things have you had to learn in doing this project that you never imagined yourself learning in the course
of living out your vocation as a Jesuit Brother?
I would never have imagined myself overseeing such a
large project. I have experience in the construction field in the
area of electricity, but I will need to be mindful of other trades
and fields. I have spent nine of my 18 years in the Society
working in our high schools as a teacher and a coach. Eight
of my years have been in studies, and this past year was spent
recovering my health.
Thus, this will be my first time seeing how the Lord will
work through me using my background in construction and
electrical work. I will be challenged to see what I do as a
ministry to all the construction workers that I will work with
over the next few years. I do feel that my vocation as a Jesuit
brother will be deepened through this assignment. This assignment is not about sacraments, it is about walking with others
as a brother does with his siblings.
Does this role as Clerk of the Work harken back to any
type of “traditional” role of the brothers in years gone by?
I would say that this does. Brothers before GC 31 (The
31st General Congregation took place in 1965 and 1966)
would be trained in trades, to care for the buildings and
grounds of our schools, parishes and retreat houses. So, yes
this harkens back to that. Yet, it will be different. I have been
trained differently than those brothers in that I have a degree
in history and spirituality. I have training in spiritual direction and, during tertainship, I prepared a preached retreat. As
I work on this project I hope my other skills and training help
Sacred Place
me to be a good minister of the Gospel
to those I will interact with each day.
When you wake in the morning
with this enormous task in front you,
what is it that gets you going and
keeps you focused?
I wake up each morning knowing
that I am going to learn much of the
history of St. Charles College and have a
part in preserving that history. Each day
is an adventure as surprises await me
and others working on this project.
Evangeline M. Vavrick, Campaign Chair
the chance to give back and to help
Evangeline’s association
with the Jesuits has been a
lifelong experience. When
invited to take on the
leadership role as chair of
Renewing a Sacred Place,
she graciously accepted
without hesitation. “The
Jesuits have always
played a significant role
in my life,” she says, “as
educators, spiritual leaders,
co-workers, friends and
family.”
This kinship began early on with her parents. Her mother,
like Ignatius Loyola, was from Northern Spain, and she
enjoyed cooking meals for Jesuit friends. “They were like
family, and my father took Jesuits hunting and fishing on a
regular basis.”
Evangeline was also influenced by her Marianite
educators but adds, “It was as if I attended a Jesuit school.
Our principal was Sister Loyola, my Latin teacher was Sister
Ignatius and mother superior was Sister Francis Xavier.”
Many of her school celebrations were Jesuit feast days, and
annual high school retreat masters were Jesuits. Fr. John
Curley, S.J. was a favorite.
Her activism began during high school when the
Marianites encouraged students to become involved in the
Catholic Students Mission Crusade. Off-campus meetings
were held at Immaculate Conception Church or Jesuit High
School and moderated by Fr. Albert Levet, S.J. The sisters also
reinforced the belief that Catholic girls should not jeopardize
their souls by attending secular college, promoting Loyola
University New Orleans as the college of choice.
Evangeline went on to earn her Bachelor of Arts, Master
of Education and Juris Doctor from Loyola. In between her
education and law careers, she worked with Jesuits as dean of
women, assistant to Fr. Anthony O’Flynn, S.J., who was then
dean of men and later Fr. Robert Boggs, S.J., who succeeded
Fr. O’Flynn. As a former student and colleague of Jesuits, she
established lasting personal relationships with many Jesuits
who became like family.
The lessons she learned along the way from Jesuit friends
were greater than the academics needed for life’s successes.
The way in which one approaches life – striving to be a person
for others, helping those who need an extra hand up to a better,
more productive life – served as the greater lesson. Among her
many Jesuit friends, counselors and advisors were Fr. Patrick
Donnelley, S.J., former president of Loyola University of New
Orleans, and Frs. Joseph Butt, Joseph Walsh and John Keller,
all of whom were incredible spiritual advisors and close
personal friends, visiting her home for dinner and special
occasions and participating in family celebrations, weddings,
baptisms and funerals.
Considering how she will honor her Jesuit friends with
her service as chair of Renewing a Sacred Place she candidly
reveals, “Some of my friends must think I am a bit crazy to
take on such a challenge, a $5 million dollar campaign in my
golden years. However, having an opportunity to give rather
than to receive is a blessing and a lesson learned from my
parents, the Marianites and the Jesuits.”
Of her commitment to the New Orleans Province and
the renovations of St. Charles College, Provincial Mark
Lewis says, “Mrs. Vavrick brings both an understanding of
service and a wealth of experience to her role as chair of the
Renewing a Sacred Place campaign.” She has served on the
Jesuit Volunteer Corps board, the Loyola Law School Visiting
Committee and on fundraising committees too numerous to
mention – most notably as one of the first women to serve on
the Archbishop’s Annual Appeal. She has been on the New
Orleans Province Development Advisory Board and was on
the committee for the successful Forging a Future Full of
Hope campaign.
With her personal history with the Jesuits as friends,
teachers, colleagues and spiritual advisors, the Jesuits of
the New Orleans Province are honored and excited to have
Evangeline M. Vavrick serve as the chair of Renewing a
Sacred Place.
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 21
In Memoriam
Fr. Michael F.
Kennelly, S.J.
Celebrating
the
Eternal Life
Fr. Anthony Concha, S.J.
Fr. Anthony
Concha, S.J.,
departed this
life on Sunday,
December 5, 2010,
in the residence at
Sacred Heart Parish in El Paso after
a brief illness. He
was 77 years of
age; he had been a Jesuit for 60 years
and a priest for 47 years. Interment was
at Concordia Cemetery in El Paso.
Born in El Paso on January 12,
1933, Fr. Concha entered the Jesuit
novitiate at St. Charles College in Grand
Coteau on July 30, 1950. After his first
vows on July 31, 1952, he studied at
Spring Hill College in Mobile where
he obtained a B.A. in Spanish in 1957,
and at the University of Panama where
he studied Spanish and Latin American
literature in the summers of 1958-59. He
received an S.T.B. from St. Mary’s College in St. Mary’s, Kansas, in 1965 and
in 1968 earned an M.A. in Spanish from
the University of New Mexico.
Fr. Concha completed his regency at
Jesuit High School in New Orleans from
1957-60 and then in 1965 returned to
his beloved El Paso and worked various assignments until his passing. From
1965-72 he taught at Jesuit High School;
from 1972-73 he was the associate pastor at Our Lady of Mount Carmel; from
1973-84 he was the teacher and vice
rector at St. Charles Minor Seminary;
and from 1984-99 he was the chaplain at
Thomason General Hospital. His last assignment was to the pastoral apostolate
at the Good Shepherd Convent.
Fr. Concha leaves behind a rich legacy of four decades of loving and holy
pastoral ministry. Many people in the
borderland area were baptized, married,
counseled, anointed, loved and cared
for by Fr. Concha. He had a special
devotion to the poor and was constantly
helping them, making them sandwiches
and giving alms to help support their
families. The graduates of Jesuit High
School of El Paso (1959-1972) will
always have a very special place in their
hearts for their wise mentor and dedicated teacher of many years.
Fr. Michael
F. Kennelly, S.J.,
departed this life
on January 3,
2011, at Ignatius
Residence in New
Orleans. He was
96 years of age; he
had been a Jesuit
for 77 years and
a priest for 64 years. He was buried in
the Jesuit Cemetery in Grand Coteau,
Louisiana.
Born on May 22, 1914, in Kilbaha,
Moyvane, County Kerry, Ireland, Fr.
Kennelly entered the Jesuit novitiate on
June 9, 1933, at St. Charles College in
Grand Coteau. After his first vows on
June 10, 1935, he studied at Spring Hill
College in Mobile, obtaining a B.A. in
Classics in 1939, followed by theology
studies at St. Mary’s College and at the
National University of Ireland in Dublin
where he received his master’s degree in
education in 1949.
Fr. Kennelly worked in many
Jesuit schools. He taught at Jesuit High
School in Tampa from 1940-43; served
as principal of Jesuit High School in
Shreveport from 1948-1953; and rector
and president of Jesuit High School in
Tampa from 1953-1959. He was founder, rector and president of Strake Jesuit
College Preparatory School in Houston
from 1959-1970, and then served as
rector and president of Loyola University New Orleans from 1970-74. He
then became the assistant pastor of Gesu
Church in Miami from 1974-75. His
later years were spent in Florida, where
he ministered as associate pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Tampa from 198082, becoming the pastor/superior from
1982-1990. From 1990-97 he was the
rector and vice-president of Jesuit High
School in Tampa. He returned to Sacred
Heart Church as the pastor emeritus and
parochial vicar in 1997. In 2002, he was
assigned to Ignatius Residence to pray
for the Church and the Society.
May perpetual light
shine upon them, O Lord…
22 The Southern Jesuit Spring
2011
Fall 2008
2009
From the Executive Director
“A stone that has been tested, a precious cornerstone as a sure foundation;
he who puts his faith in it shall not be shaken.”
Isaiah 28:16b
Friends,
As one of nine children from a
good Catholic family, I was urged to
get involved with civic affairs by my
father and to “put my faith into practice” by my mother. All nine of us kids
were instilled with the notion that when
we finish something or leave some
place, it should be better for our having
been there. And, most importantly, we
should thank God for the opportunity to help others.
It is that very spirit that I see in such huge measure
with Br. Larry Huck, S.J., and Mrs. Evangeline Vavrick. It
is through their incredible efforts that the renovations of St.
Charles College will take place. No matter what they face
personally, because they are fully committed to the success of
the goals of Renewing a Sacred Place, they will leave behind
a better environment and a better legacy.
I urge you to take the time to read the stories on Br.
Huck’s role as the “Clerk of the Work” and Vangie Vavrick
as our Campaign Chair. He serves as the point man on the
renovation, and she leads the efforts to secure the necessary
funding.
They are both working hard to make this project come in
“on time and under budget” and leave St. Charles College better than it was before. And they seek to do this for the magis.
This Latin term for “the more” encapsulates the Jesuit call to
respond boldly to the needs of the Church for God’s greater
glory.
Both Br. Huck and Mrs. Vavrick know that it is in doing
more for Christ that we do more for others. The magis is an
expression of an aspiration and inspiration. It relates to forming a more perfect environment focused on Jesus Christ.
Renewing a Sacred Place seeks the magis by creating a
space where novices, senior Jesuits and retreatants can ask
themselves those piercing questions of the Spiritual Exercises
of Ignatius: “What have I done for God? What am I doing for
God? and What MORE can I do for Him?”
So I beg of you to pray that Br. Huck, Mrs. Vavrick and
our Province will be successful in efforts to make St. Charles
College even better – not for its own sake – but for its service
to our Church and to God. It is my prayer that we may work
towards the magis in all that we do.
Peace,
Connect with us online
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anytime!
Whether you’re on a much-needed
vacation, hitting the books in the
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office, or smart phone… you can keep
up with Jesuit News!
Read our magazine, join our prayer
circle, download Jesuit talks and online
retreats, and keep up with our news
and events at www.norprov.org .
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 23
Annual
Report
Annual Report
We are proud to present to you this annual report of benefactors to the Jesuit Seminary and Mission Fund, New Orleans, also known as The Jesuits. These benefactors have truly
been companions to the Jesuits of the New Orleans Province,
for without them, much of the work displayed in this magazine could not happen or even be considered.
This report reflects gifts given to the Jesuit Seminary and
Mission Fund, New Orleans, in our 2010 fiscal year, July 1,
2009 to June 30, 2010. Gifts made after that date will be listed
in the next report.
$50,000 or more
Anonymous (1)
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Benson
Estate of Mrs. Jane G. Cherry
Mrs. Suzanne W. Turner
Gayle and Tom Benson Charitable
Foundation
Estate of Rev. Jean M. Germain
$25,000 to $49,999
Estate of Mr. Joseph J. Airhart
Mrs. Frances L. McCaul
Estate of Mrs. Melissa C. Norvell
Dr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Scarola
Estate of Mrs. Mary E. Westerfield
Eye, Ear, Nose & Throat
Foundation
Rockwell Fund, Inc.
The Mike and Mary Terry Family
Foundation
$10,000 to $24,999
Anonymous (1)
Estate of Mr. Cyrus J. Caruso
Mrs. Hazel R. Fechtel
Mrs. Marie L. Jansen
Senator and Mrs. Francis E.
Lauricella
Mr. and Mrs. Scot W. O’Brien
Estate of Mr. Emmett J. Rahm
Mr. and Mrs. Roy A.
Schnebelen, Sr.
Mr. Robert Steck
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Strenski
Mr. Jeffrey E. Willis
Anonymous (1)
The Almar Foundation
Ronnie & Gwen Briggs
Foundation
24 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
The Catholic Foundation
Community Foundation of
Tampa Bay
Koch Foundation, Inc.
Lauricella Land Company
Foundation
Longwell Family Foundation
The Jane P. and Wiley L. Mossy Jr.
Foundation
$5,000 to $9,999
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. J. Timothy Arnoult
and Family
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Caime
Dr. and Mrs. Lucius J. Doucet, II
Ms. Ellen Isabel Geheeb
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Gerdes
Estate of Mr. Joseph B. Hourihan
Mr. and Mrs. Roberto J. Iglesias
Mr. H. Alston Johnson, III
Mr. and Mrs. F. Vern Lahart
Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. Munin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Murphy, Jr.
Mr. Richard J. Neuenfeldt, Jr.
Mr. Leon K. Poche, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. David J.
Romagosa, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Irwin F. Sentilles, III
Estate of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J.
Soniat
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Stevens
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph N. Vaz
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Zuschlag
Anonymous (1)
Bahl & Gaynor, Inc.
Greater Houston Community
Foundation
Knights of Columbus Council
J. Edgar Monroe Foundation
It is with warm and hearty thanks that we celebrate these
thousands of companions in the Lord who want to see the
Gospel proclaimed, the love of Jesus made manifest, and the
Church as a source of the faith that seeks justice.
Gratefully,
Raskob Foundation For Catholic
Activities, Inc.
Stuller Family Foundation
$2,500 to $4,999
Anonymous (2)
Dr. Robert P. Blereau
Dr. Louis E. Browning
Mr. and Mrs. David F. Byrne
Mr. Salvadore J. Christiana
Mr. James S. Gallagher
Dr. Pilar A. Garcia
Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Hubach, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Keller
Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. Morris, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Murphy
and Family
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Rickerd
Rev. Joseph H. Stemmann
Mr. and Mrs. Emmanuel C.
Tisseverasinghe
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J.
Weingartner
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Zipple
Couch Family Foundation, Inc.
St. Bernard Church, City of
Breaux Bridge, La.
$1,000 to $2,499
Anonymous (2)
Mr. John D. Abeln
Mr. Thomas E. Baker
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Baker, III
Mr. George E. Barrett
Mr. and Mrs. Scotty J. Baudoin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Berner, Jr.
Mr. Thomas R. Blum
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony R.
Borrow, Sr.
Mrs. Maedell H. Braud
Michael Bourg
Executive Director
Jesuit Seminary and Mission Fund
New Orleans
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth A.
Buddendorff, III
Mrs. Ruth R. Caldwell
Mr. Joseph H. Campbell, Jr.
Hon. and Mrs. Philip C. Ciaccio
Mr. C. J. Collins, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Corcoran
Mr. George L. Daly
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Alcuin P. Deutsch
Mrs. Mary A. Deutsch
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Didier
Ms. Annie C. Dombeck
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Dunn, Jr.
Mrs. Adrian G. Duplantier
Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Espenan
Miss Audrey M. Fellabaum
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Emmanual
Fermanis
Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert Fitzgerald
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne J.
Francingues
Mr. Daniel E. Gallagher
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gates
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Gorman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John O. Hebert, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Herbert
Mrs. Mary A. Jolley
Mr. Thomas M. Jones and Dr.
Leslie C. Tregillus
Mr. Richee Joseph
Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Kaley
Mr. Joseph F. Kelley
Mr. James G. Kelley
Hon. Thomas H. Kingsmill, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry D. Laird
Mr. and Mrs. Hal W. Lamb, III
Mr. Alexander A. Lell
Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Longwell
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Lorio, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. David J. Lorio
Mrs. Narcille C. Lorio
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Lorio
Dr. and Mrs. Ray J. Lousteau
Mr. John S. Madigan
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Mason
Dr. Patrick P. McDermott
Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. McVay
Mr. and Mrs. Harold M.
Messmer, Jr.
Mr. Warren L. Montgomery
Rev. James P. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Hicks B. Morgan
Mr. Wiley L. Mossy, Jr.
Dr. Vincent A. Muscarella
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Nolan
Dr. Thomas J. Nuckton
Mr. and Mrs. Neil J. O’Brien
Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Ondrusek
Mrs. Bonnie Pereida
Mrs. Marie Louise Peters
Mr. and Mrs. David Poole
Dr. Michael J. Prejean, Sr.
Mr. Gerry Pugil and Ms. Julie
Ellerhorst
Mrs. Alma D. Reed
Mr. Frank K. Ribelin †
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Rizzo, Jr.
Most Rev. Thomas J. Rodi
Dr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Rolfes
Mr. Edward J. Ruppert
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Saunders, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Schafer
Ms. Ellen C. Sessions
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew F.
Shannon, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D.
Sibbernsen
Dr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Smith
Dr. Edward E. Sommerfeldt
Dr. and Mrs. Anthony R.
Spedale, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Nguyen V. Tan
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne E. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Tillotson
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Watts C.
Ueltschey, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton L. Vavasseur
Mrs. Graciela Vela-Cuellar
Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Whitehead
Mr. and Mrs. Alan C. Wolf
Mrs. Georgia M. Wright
J. H. Campbell, Jr. Fund
Carencro Catholic School
Diocese of Fort Worth
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Frontier Capital Management
Company, LLC
Fry Krisp Food Products, Inc.
Knights of Columbus-Arizona
State Council
Loyola University
The Messmer Family Foundation
Nelson Family Foundation
Schwab Charitable Fund
St. Joseph Catholic Church of
Rayne
Stuart-Griffin-Perlitz, Foundation
Tregillus Jones Family Foundation
John and Ellen Warner Trust
$500 to $999
Anonymous (2)
Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Adrian
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Arceneaux
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Baier
Mr. Robert J. Bannin †
Mr. Frank J. Bantle, Sr.
Mrs. Noblet H. Barry
Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. Bednar
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P Borst
Dr. Edward F. Breaux
Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Brill
Hon. and Mrs. Marcus A.
Broussard, Jr.
Ms. Antonia Burger
Ms. Gloria B. Callais
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy R. Campbell
Mr. Ramon M. Cantu, III
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Carty, Sr.
Mr. M. Hampton Carver
Mr. Robert R. Casey
Dr. and Mrs. Terence T. Casey
Dr. and Mrs. Francis T.
Cazayoux, Sr.
Mrs. Mary P. Childers
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian A. Colon
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory L. Conner
Mr. Ronald J. Deck
Mrs. Francis A. DeLage
Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Dietz
Mr. and Mrs. Don C. Dorsey
Mr. William J. Dowie
Mr. Ralph F. Downey, II
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce L. Ehni
Most Rev. John C. Favalora
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Favrot, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Finegan
Mrs. Nancy S. Fontenot
Mr. Peter J. Ford
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Foster
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Fuller
Ms. Julia H. Geheeb
Mr. and Mrs. Richard O. Gonzmart
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan P. Gootee
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Gragg
Dr. and Mrs. Francis C.
Gwazdauskas
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Haynes
Ms. Christine Hebert
Dr. Joan F. Hilton
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Hoefer, Jr.
Mrs. Jane C. Hogan
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Jackson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenz F. Koerber, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Orest Koropecky
Mr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Kramer
Mr. F. Donald Krusemark †
Mr. Ronald P. LeBlanc
Mrs. Lois A. Lucas
Mrs. Mary M. Lundy
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V.
Mangelsdorf
Mr. Joseph E. Marron
Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. McGuire
Mr. John L. McKnight, II
Mr. Robert McKnight
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M.
Melsheimer
Mr. Matthew V. Merola
Mr. Charles N. Miller, Jr.
Dr. Michael A. Miroue
Mr. Jose F. Montes
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon H. Moret, Sr.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank C. Morrone
Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. Muse
Mr. and Mrs. Joey Newman, III
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Nicholson
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn L. Noya
Col. Charles H. Ockrassa
Mr. and Mrs. William F. O’Hara
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Oustalet
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford W. Parent
Mr. Robert R. Park
Mrs. Vicki C. Patterson
Mr. and Mrs. Howell B. Payne, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Perlitz
Mr. and Mrs. Claiborne W.
Perrilliat, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George Pivach, II
Mrs. G. Earl Quattlebaum
Mr. and Mrs. Raphael J.
Rabalais, Jr.
Ms. Susan S. Rausch
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Reynaud
Mr. Charles B. Richard
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ridgeway
Rev. Raymond Robitaille
Dr. and Mrs. Alvin M. Rouchell
Dr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Roux, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Gary E. Sander
Dr. and Mrs. John B. Sardisco
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Schott, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Schreiber
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Schuster
Mrs. Marilyn Sims
Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Stemmans
Mr. and Mrs. W. Michael
Stemmans
Ms. Diana F. Stuart †
Ms. Rose M. Thibodaux
Mr. and Mrs. Francis A.
Thibodeaux
Dr. and Mrs. Melvin L. Triay, III
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Trochta
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Underhill
Miss Constance J. U’Ren
Miss Jacquelyn M. U’Ren
Dr. and Mrs. Paul M. Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Fergus J. Walker, Jr.
Mrs. Patricia W. Whelan
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis R. Yeager
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Zingaro
Carmel of St. Anne
Catholic Daughters #868
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Council, No. 1437
Manresa House of Retreats
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St. Charles College Staff
The Harry Tompson Center
$250 to $499
Anonymous (4)
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Ackels
Mr. and Mrs. Byron A. Adams, Sr.
Mrs. Irene A. Adolph
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Adolph
Ms. Nancy Alchediak
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Anderson
Mrs. Marie T. Anlage
Mr. Sidney V. Arbour, Jr. †
Mr. and Mrs. Harold I.
Bahlinger, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Digby W. Barrios
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bateman
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T.
Beaullieu, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick H. Berens
Dr. and Mrs. Ray J. Bouzigard
Mr. and Mrs. Brian P. Branda
Mrs. Patricia Brown
Mr. Charles J. Burghardt
Mrs. Barrie S. Byrnes
Dr. and Mrs. Charles P. Cavaretta
Mr. and Mrs. James J.
Chamberlain
Dr. and Mrs. Robert H.
Charbonnet
Mr. and Mrs. R. Preston Cifreo
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick T. Cimino
Mrs. Loretta C. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clark, Jr.
Mr. David B. Conner
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Connors
Mr. J. Parker Conrad, Sr.
Ms. Jeanne T. Cooney
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Creagan
Dr. and Mrs. Guy G. Cresson
Mr. George F. and Dr. Deanna Kay
Crozier
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Cuccia
Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Daly, Jr.
Miss Alice T. Davis
Mrs. Jane E. Deas
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Delaney
Mr. Ronald Dewhirst †
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Dooley, Jr.
Mrs. Camille M. Dooley
Mr. Kerry M. Dooley
Mr. and Mrs. Cleto N. Duran
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Eckholdt
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Faherty, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace J. Farge, III
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Fichter
Mrs. Mary C. Fitzgerald
Mr. Walter B. Fleming
Dr. and Mrs. Michael A. Flusche
Mr. William Freyd
Mr. and Mrs. Wynne P. Friedrichs
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Fuhr
Mrs. Antoinette Galarneau
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G.
Gallagher, Jr.
Mr. Emilio F. Garcia
Mrs. Joan E. Gaulene
Dr. and Mrs. Wilson T.
Gautreaux, Jr.
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Carl J. Giffin, Sr.
Dr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Giorgio, Jr.
Ms. Jeanne M. Girsch
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur K. Gorman
Dr. and Mrs. M. R. Green, Jr.
Mrs. Madeline W. Groenewegen
Mr. Davis A. Gueymard
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Gunn
Mr. and Mrs. Robin W. Hanemann
Rev. William Hanley
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Harris, III
Rev. T. Louis Herlong
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Hooks
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Hotard, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Hotop
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Hutchison
Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand J.
Iseringhausen, Sr.
Mrs. Irene R. Johnson
Mrs. Phyllis B. Jones
Mr. Ralph W. Junius, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy S. Kearns
Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Kegg
Dr. John L. Klause
The Hon. Nancy A. Konrad
Mr. and Mrs. Owen J. LaCour, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen J. LaCour, Jr.
Mrs. Eleanor S. Lajoie
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph A.
Lamendola, Jr.
Mrs. Allissa S. Leach
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. LeBlanc, Jr.
Mrs. Eileen M. Light
Dr. and Mrs. Keith G. Lorio
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. Lynch
Mrs. Irene E. Mackenroth
Dr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Malveaux
Ms. Mary B. Maxwell
Mr. Lawrence May, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. McCaffery
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R.
McMahon, Jr.
Mr. John M. McMahon
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy W. Miciotto
Mrs. Beatrice B. Monju
Mr. and Mrs. Octave P. Montagnet
Mrs. Dora R. Munoz
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Murret
Mrs. Bertha A. Myles
Ms. Patsy D. Null
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence P. Oertling
Mrs. Margaret L. O’Neill
Mr. Joseph M. Paniello
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Pavur
Mrs. Mildred C. Peiffer
Mrs. Janet F. Pigott
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Pinter
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Pistorius
Mrs. Frances C. Pivach
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Poche
Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Provenza
Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Purvis, Jr.
Mrs. Mary J. Quinn
Mrs. Linda A. Rabalais
Mr. and Mrs. Rick P. Redmann, Jr.
Miss Marie R. Rinaudo
Mrs. Patricia Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Ruh
Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Ryan
Mrs. Rosemary G. Ryan
Cdr. and Mrs. Patrick A. Sabadie
Dr. and Mrs. John C. Scharfenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schiro
Rev. James E. Schott
Judge and Mrs. Patrick M. Schott
Mrs. Mary N. Schreiber-Norville
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Schuster
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M.
Schwarzbek
Mrs. Maureen M. Seabury
Dr. John J. Siegert
Mr. Craig A. Silva
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Sivula
Mr. and Mrs. H. Gordon Smith, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. I. Paul Solomon
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos E. Sosa
Mr. and Mrs. Roger T. Staubach
Dr. and Mrs. Rudy W. Stefancik
Mrs. Laura Stell-Fresquez
Miss Irma M. Stiegler
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Sullivan
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Walter O. Theiss
Ms. Mary H. Thibodeaux
Mr. H. Stuart Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Thompson
Mr. Ky Thompson and Mrs.
Margaret Melun
Mrs. Charlotte L. Todd
Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Tomich
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Trahan
Mrs. Evangeline M. Vavrick
Mr. Donald J. Voorhies, C.F.
Mr. and Mrs. Hunter O. Wagner, Jr.
Mr. Christopher V. Waldorf
Dr. and Mrs. Terence E. Walsh
Mr. Joseph A. Webb
Mrs. Merlyn Weilbaecher
Mr. V. M. Wheeler, III
Mrs. Jane T. Wicker
Hon. and Mrs. Thomas C.
Wicker, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland J. Wiltz
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Winters
Mrs. Mary B. Witte
Ms. Helen B. Woodman
Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Zuber, Jr.
Immaculate Conception Church,
Alburquerque, New Mexico
Ramsay Corporation
Schneider Paper Products
The Foreign Language Club,
Slidell High School
$100 to $249
Anonymous (2)
Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Abbene
Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Abbott
Mrs. Patricia J. Abel
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 25
Annual
Report
Dr. and Mrs. Nick J. Accardo, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Ackels
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Ackels
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Acosta
Mr. and Mrs. Howard K. Adolph
Mrs. Joan S. Agosta
Mr. and Mrs. Jose L. Aguilar
Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd J. Aguillard, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Albenesius
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond P.
Albrecht, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Alvaro B. Alcazar
Ms. Patricia Alchediak
Mr. Paul V. Alex
Mr. John D. Allgaier
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B.
Anderson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Applewhite
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Arnold, II
Dr. and Mrs. William D. Atchison
Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Austin
Mr. Philip T. Austin-Wimpey
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Babineaux
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Bahlinger
Dr. and Mrs. James K. Baker
Mr. Ronald D. Baker
Mrs. Rose Mary S. Baldioceda
Ms. Mary Jean Balthrop
Mrs. Catherine Banos Schneider
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Barbas
Mr. and Mrs. August J. Barbier, Jr.
Mr. Juan M. Barona
Mr. and Mrs. J. Baker Barr, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A.
Barreca, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Barrett
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Barry
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Barry, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Barry, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman L.
Bastian, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Nicolas G. Bazan
Miss Dora M. Beard
Dr. and Mrs. William P. Beatrous
Mr. and Mrs. John D’Arcy Becker
Mrs. Vivien A. Behlar
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Bent
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Berend and
Family
Mr. and Mrs. Brian P. Berrigan
Dr. and Mrs. Manuel Berriozabal
Mr. and Mrs. Manning F. Billeaud
Mr. and Mrs. Paul I. Black, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Blanchett
Mr. Ronald B. Blitch
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell J. Bogardus
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus A. Bollom
Mr. Frank M. Bologna
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard F.
Bonnecaze, Jr.
Mrs. Jean E. Bordelon
Mr. and Dr. Michael S. Bourg
Mr. Daniel J. Bourgeois, Sr.
Mr. Aubrey J. Bourgeois
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Bove
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Brandau
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Q. Breard
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Breault, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy C. Brennan
Mr. John H. Bres
Mr. Andre G. Bricard
Dr. and Mrs. Michael J. Briggs
26 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
Mr. Salvatore H. Brocato
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Brocato
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Broders
Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Brophy
Dr. Oswald D. R. Brown
Dr. James E. Brown, Sr.
Dr. and Mrs. James P. Browning
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest G. Bruder
Mr. and Mrs. Barrett A. Bruff
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Brug
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Budd
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bulger
Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Burnett
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Burnham
Dr. and Mrs. Timothy M. Burns
Ms. Patricia C. Butler
Mr. and Mrs. John Caldarera, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Rafael F. Calderon
Mrs. Edith T. Canal
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Canizaro
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Harold J. Carbo
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Carpenter
Mrs. Marjorie K. Case
Ms. Catherine M. Cash
Miss Vivian B. Cazayoux
Dr. and Dr. Russel P. Cecola
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Chahine
Mr. and Mrs. Bert S. Chamberlain
Ms. Heloise R. Chambers
Mrs. Rose Mary Charbonnet
Mr. and Mrs. John D.
Charbonnet, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Chavez, Jr.
Mr. Thomas P. Chesney
Mr. Daniel R. Chesney
Major and Mrs. Hosan Chinen,
USAF (Ret.)
Ms. Nancy A. Ching
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Church, Sr.
Mr. Christopher J. Clarke
Ms. Patti M. Clement
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Coleman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Combe, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon E. Comeaux
Miss Cecilia E. Concha
Ms. Jo Ann Condry
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Coney
Dr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Connaughton
Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. Conner
Dr. and Mrs. Edward S. Connolly
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P.
Coogan, Jr.
Mr. James J. Cooke, Jr.
Mr. William J. Cooney
Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Corbin
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Cordaro
Dr. Pierce S. Corden
Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Cordes, Jr.
Ms. Lucy J. Costantini
Ms. Sarah Ann Courtney
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Cox, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Crain
Mr. G. Price Crane, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis M. Crean
Mr. Anthony V. Cuccia
Mr. Flavin C. Cullerton
Mrs. Therese B. Cush
Mr. and Mrs. Drago K. Cvitanovich
Brig. Gen. and Mrs. J. Levy
Dabadie, Jr.
Mr. Matthew C. Dabadie
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Daboval
Ms. Mildred A. Daffron
Mr. Edmond L. Daigle, Sr.
Mrs. Maria G. Daly
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Daly
Dr. Nicholas A. D’Amato
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Daniels
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Dardis, Sr.
Dr. and Mrs. F. Ralph Dauterive
Mrs. Lovenia De Conge-Watson
Dr. and Mrs. Gaston A. de la
Bretonne, Jr.
Ms. Katherine L. de Montluzin
Mr. Robert M. Deano
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. del Corral
Ms. Antonia Delak
Ms. Rosario DeLeon
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Charles J.
Derbes, Jr.
Mrs. Marie Derbes
Mr. and Mrs. Todd A. Dittmann
Ms. Carolyn Doiron
Mrs. Ruth M. Dolan
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Domingue
Mr. Jacob E. Dominick
Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Dominy
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin P.
Dongieux
Ms. Elaine L. Donner
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Drez
Dr. James S. Dugal
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dugas
Dr. and Mrs. Claude M.
Duplechian
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dupont
Mrs. Carmel A. Duran †
Mr. and Mrs. David Durfee
Mrs. Thomas L. Dwyer
Mr. Sherif A. Ebrahim
Dr. and Mrs. Emilio D. Echevarria
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Elias
Dr. and Mrs. Elliott F. Elledge
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen E.
Ellender, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Elliot, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Elliot
Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Elvir
Ms. Madeline Engel
Mr. Kurt D. Engelhardt
Mrs. Julia E. Enriquez
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Esparza, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Sergio A. Esperdy
Mr. John F. Ewens
Mr. and Mrs. Guerre I. Fabacher
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Falke
Dr. and Mrs. Barry F. Faust
Mrs. Gerald J. Favaloro, Sr.
Mr. Peter Federowicz
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fein, III
Mr. and Mrs. Mariano H.
Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Ferro
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Ferry
Mr. Joseph M. Ferullo
Mr. and Mrs. Don Fisher
Mrs. Lurlyn G. Fitzpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H.
Fitzpatrick
Mrs. Grace M. Flanagan
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Flanagan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Flatley
Mr. Edwin R. Fleischmann, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Cletus G. Fleming, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. William Fleming
Mrs. Henriette Flynn
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Lawrence P. Flynn
Hon. and Mrs. Ronald A. Fonseca
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Fontenot, Jr.
Mr. Thomas D. Forbes
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Ford
Mrs. Rosealie A. Foster
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Foster
Dr. Theda A. Foster
Mrs. Maria L. Franklin
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Frasier
Ms. Wanda R. Frederick
Mr. and Mrs. John David Fruge
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton D. Fryer
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Gallagher
Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Gallmann, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Gallo
Mrs. Shirley B. Galvez
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L.
Gambel, Jr.
Mrs. Anna C. Gamble
Mrs. Margaret S. Garcia
Mrs. Frances Garcia
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Garcia
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph A. GarciaPrats
Mr. and Mrs. Jose A. Garrido
Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Garsaud, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gaudry
Mr. Leo C. Geary and Family
Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence A.
Giambelluca
Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Giangrosso
Mr. James H. Gibbens, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Frank Gibbons
Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. Gibson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Gilbert, Jr.
Mrs. Edward G. Gillin
Ms. Peggy Giroir
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Glas
Mr. and Mrs. E. Jackson Going, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Golemi
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gonzales
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Gonzales
Mr. and Mrs. Carleton A. Graham
Mrs. Clara L. Granata
Mr. and Mrs. Nestor Granelli
Mrs. Mary Ann Graugnard
Mr. E. Morris Gray, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jon A. Green
Prof. Paul A. Grendler
Mr. and Mrs. James T.
Grevemberg
Mr. Louis H. Grieshop
Mr. James H. Grommersch
Mr. Paul G. Grossimon
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Grossimon
Mr. and Mrs. Willis M. Guilbeau
Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Haag, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Haase, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret M. Haden
Ms. Mary Haile
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher K.
Halterman
Mrs. Janet Hamlin
Mrs. Marie E. Hand
Hon. and Mrs. Gerard J. Hansen
Mrs. Edith S. Harris
Ms. Joann V. Hart
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Hartel, Jr.
Mrs. Patricia J. Hayes
Mrs. Diane Hayes
Mrs. Mary E. Hayes
Mrs. Susan C. Heidelberger
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Hellmers, Jr.
Mrs. Carolyn A. Hess
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M.
Hetherwick, III
Ms. Lilia G. Heveroh
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Hickman
Mr. Earl J. and Dr. Janet B. Higgins
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard H. Hilbert
Ms. Inez A. Hinckley
Mr. J. Ronald Hinze
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Hite
Ms. Lucille Hixon
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hodges
Drs. Mary and Glenden Hoffman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Hogan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Holden
Mr. Mark R. Holloway
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Holmes
Mrs. Mary Frances Hope
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Horton
and Family
Mrs. Pearl Houston
Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Howat, Sr.
Msgr. Michael A. Howell
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Huete
Archbishop Alfred C. Hughes, Jr.
Mr. James D. Hughes
Mr. and Mrs. Merl Huntsinger
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Huval
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Irwin, Jr.
Mr. Brent J. Iskra
Dr. and Mrs. Richard G. Jaeckle
Ms. Emily M. Jastram
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Jeanfreau
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Jewell
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar P. Johnson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip J. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin E. Jones
Mrs. Ana Jones
Mr. Juan A. Junco
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian E. Kaiser, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William N. Kammer
Dr. and Mrs. George H. Karam
Rev. Hubert J. Kealy †
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Keefner
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Keller, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret D. Kelly
Mrs. Angela B. Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kerekes
Mrs. Leah Kilburn
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Kinabrew, III
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Kincade
Mr. and Mrs. Norman L. King
Mr. Freddie D. King
Dr. and Mrs. Hugh A. King, Jr.
Mr. Robert A. Kiolbassa and
Family
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Kiran
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Kitchen
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Kloor
Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Knapek
Mr. Charles A. Knight, III
Mrs. Mary A. Knoop
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Koch
Dr. Paul E. Koenig
Mr. Joseph A. Kral
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Krinock
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Krist
Ms. Ethel M. Kutac
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Laborde, Sr.
Mr. Alden J. Laborde
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey J. Lacombe
Mr. David P. Landry
Mr. and Mrs. Mark C. Landry
Judge Merrill T. Landwehr
Mr. and Mrs. Neal F. Lane
Ms. Christine G. Langston
Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. LaRosa
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Larose
Ms. Leona R. Larzelere
Dr. and Mrs. James S. Lawton
Mr. and Mrs. Rene J. Lazare, Jr.
Dr. Louis P. LeBlanc, Jr.
Ms. Marjorie L. LeBlanc
Dr. Harold W. Ledoux
Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Leech
Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Leighton, Jr.
Miss Yvonne M. Leininger
The Honorables Harry T. Lemmon
and Mary Ann Lemmon
Judge Mary A. Lemmon
Mr. and Mrs. Linden Lentz
Mrs. Albina Levine
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald M. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Lewis
Mr. Ronald Lignion
Dr. and Mrs. James Linn, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. Linzy
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lipari
Mr. and Mrs. Jude A. Lirette
Mrs. Mary M. Liuzza
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson P. Loga, III
Mrs. Rita Lucius
Mr. and Mrs. Theo J. Madere, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Chilo Madrid
Mrs. Hilda M. Maestri
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Maguire
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Mahoney
Dr. and Mrs. Bernard L. Manale
Mr. Michael M. Manning
Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. Manthey
Mrs. Mary C. Mares
Mrs. Jacqueline C. Martin
Dr. and Mrs. Dean F. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Martin
Mr. Dominic J. Massa
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Masset
Mr. and Mrs. Jack J. Mastandrea
Dr. and Mrs. Emil J. Mateker, Jr.
Mr. Andre J. Mathurin
Mr. and Mrs. James Maurer
Dr. and Dr. Gary P. Mayeux
Mrs. Frances M. McCulla
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
McDermott, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. McDowell
Mr. Gerard A. McGill
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. McGlone
Mrs. Carol K. McGovern
Mrs. Mary C. McGranahan
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L.
McGuire, Jr.
Miss Irene T. McMahon
Mr. J. L. McMaster, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. McPhaul, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James D. McPhillips
Mr. Thomas B. McTighe, Jr.
Mrs. Mercedes M. Meier
Rev. Msgr. Louis J. Melancon
Miss Pamela J. Meldrum
Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore P. Mele
Mrs. Pierce M. Meleton
Mr. and Mrs. Servando H. Mendez
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Mennel
Mr. George E. Merritt
Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Mestayer
Mrs. Jeanne Meyer
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Meyer, Jr.
and Family
Miss Joan M. Meyers
Mrs. Janice C. Michaelis
Mr. Louis J. Michot
Mrs. Shirley G. Miester
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene P. Miller
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Mrs. Lou Wilda S. Andrus
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The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 27
Annual
Report
Cdr. Aline M. Arceneaux
Dr. Rosalie Ardoin
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Ardoin
Mr. Robert Arellano and Ms.
Kathryn Wright
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Miss Florine A. Blouin
Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Bluntzer, Jr.
Mr. Roger A. Bombardier
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Bonderud
28 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
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Mrs. Shirley Buddendorff
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Mr. and Mrs. William J. Burke, Jr.
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Mr. Darrell J. Burleigh
Ms. Mary E. Burns
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Fr. John P. Cahill
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Mr. Robert T. Canal
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Mr. Louis D. Curet
Mr. William P. Curry, Jr.
Mr. Charles R. Cutcliff
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Lt. Col. and Mrs. Charles F. Daigle,
USAF (Ret.)
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Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Danove
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Mrs. Helen B. Doolittle
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Ms. Margaret M. Dublin
Mr. Daniel E. Duerr
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Ms. Deborah M. Duffy
Mrs. Norma B. Duffy
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Mr. and Mrs. Earl C. Duntz
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Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Dupuy
Sr. Margaret Durick
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Mrs. Joan H. Eckholdt
Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Ecuyer, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Edel
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Mr. and Mrs. Gaylon Edwards
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Ms. Roslyn M. Elfer
Mrs. Connie Elkins
Mr. James P. Elliott
Mrs. Louise Abide Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ellis
Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Elmer, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Elsner
Mrs. Joyce Engolia
Mr. Gregory L. Ernst
Mrs. Kathleen F. Esinhart
Mr. Mickey Esparza
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Eustis
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Dr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Falvo
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Mrs. Vincent S. Ferrara
Mr. John S. Fineran, III
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Mrs. and Mr. Diane Fisher
Mr. Kris Fisher
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Ronald W. Fisk
Ms. Mary K. Fitzgerald
Mr. Walter L. Fleming, III
Mr. and Mrs. Michael I. Flynn
Mr. Harold J. Fontenot
Ms. Marilyn A. Forni
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Fowler
Mrs. Dorothy L. Franz
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit X. Frederic
Mr. Ralph C. Freibert, III
Mrs. Frances J. Fremin
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Frey
Mr. John G. Frick, Jr.
Mrs. John C. Fuchs, Jr.
Mrs. Trisha M. Fusch
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Fuselier
Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Fuxan
Mrs. Ella Gabb
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Galvan
Dr. and Mrs. Charles O. Galvin
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Mr. Donald R. Garcia
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Mr. and Mrs. Boyd T. Gautreaux
Dr. William L. Geary
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Mrs. Andrea C. Giles
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Ms. Verrina G. Gilt
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Mr. and Mrs. Freddy R. Gorman
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Miss Mary Frances Hallet
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Halphen
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Hamilton
Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Hamilton
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Dr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Hansen, Jr.
Ms. Cynthia M. Harder
Ms. Dona Harrington-Burns
Mrs. Sara E. Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Harris
Mr. Charles F. Hartensteiner, III
Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Hartlage, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Harvey
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Mr. and Mrs. John J.
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Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Hebert
Mrs. Muriel B. Hebert
Miss Jean C. Hecker
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hepburn, II
Dr. and Mrs. Frank L. Herbert
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbertto Hermosillo
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Ms. Patricia Hewitt
Mr. James V. Hewitt
Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Hickey
Ms. Jeanne C. Hickey
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Mr. and Mrs. C. Robert Holloway
Mr. and Mrs. Ted A. Holy
Mrs. Beverly L. Hopkins
Mrs. Gayle Hopkins
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Ms. Elizabeth R. Hortog
Ms. Nanciann Horvath
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Hosemann
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Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Howat, Jr.
Ms. Yolande C. Howat
Dr. and Mrs. Edward J.
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Mrs. Elizabeth Hulick
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Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Jacobs
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Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D. Journey
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Mr. Gaven T. Kammer
Dr. Charles Kargleder
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J.
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Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Kelley, Jr.
Mr. Tom F. Kelly
Dr. and Mrs. Carl E. Kemmerly, III
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Mr. Theodore P. Kerhulas
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Kernan
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Kerner, III
Mr. and Mrs. Norman R. Kerth
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Kettler
Ms. Claire Killeen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Killeen, Sr.
Mr. Richard F. King
Mr. and Mrs. Warren B. Kirsch
Mrs. Dorothy D. Klar
Mrs. Rosemary M. Klein
Mrs. Patricia O. Knight
Mrs. and Mrs. Thomas P. Kolwe
Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Kostelnik
Mr. and Mrs. George Kostohryz
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Kowalski
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Krentel
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Kron
Ms. Helen M. Krzes
Mr. Edward J. Kvet
Mr. and Mrs. George D. Labbe
Mr. and Mrs. Gary J. Laborde
Mrs. Stacey Colfry Lacour
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Ladymon
Mr. Donald E. Lagarde, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Laguens
Miss Gaylyn M. Lambert
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. LaNasa
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lange
Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Lanning
Mr. and Mrs. Pierre F. Lapeyre
Mrs. Lisa R. LaPorte
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Larre
Mrs. Margaret Larriviere
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby V. Laurents
Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Lavery
Mrs. Thyra M. Layden
Mr. and Mrs. J. Dwight LeBlanc, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph V. LeBlanc
Mr. and Mrs. Hewitt P. LeBlanc
Dr. and Mrs. Bryce J. LeBlanc, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Dwight LeBlanc, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. LeBlanc
Mrs. Marie G. Leckert
Mrs. Helen D. Lefevre
Mrs. Lori Legler
Ms. Carole M. Legnon
Miss Aloysia M. LeMaire
Ms. Kathy LeRouge
Mr. and Mrs. James Lester
Mr. and Mrs. Carl U. Leverenz
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Levin
Mr. Michael A. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Dixon Lewis
Ms. Lynn S. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Liang
Ms. Margaret A. Lieux
Mrs. Shirley Fay Lieux
Mrs. William P. Liljestrom
Mr. and Mrs. Earle W. Long, III
Mrs. Paul A. Longo
Mrs. Catherine L. Lord
Mr. Merlin E. Louapre
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lovallo
Ms. Theresa Lutostanski
Mrs. D. J. Lyde
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Lynch
Mrs. Whidyne Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Macaluso
Ms. Josephine E. Macaluso
Mrs. Elizabeth MacDonald
Mrs. Athalie G. Macgowan
Mr. and Mrs. Lester J. Madere, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos O. Maese
Mr. and Mrs. Nickie C. Maggio
Miss Merlyn M. Maillian
Ms. Virginia A. Major
Mrs. Zelma Malone
Mrs. Lorraine Manoukian
Ms. Kathleen Manuel
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Marchi
Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Margavio
Mrs. Ellen Marino
Judge and Mrs. Ruche J. Marino
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Markey
Mr. Eugene Martin, Jr.
Mrs. Patricia A. Martin
Mr. Lorenzo E. Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Leandro L.
Martinez, Jr.
Mr. Lawrence A. Mason
Mr. and Mrs. Pete P. Matteucci
Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Maunoir
Mr. Joseph B. Maurin
Mr. and Mrs. Francis X. Mayer
Mr. Robert Paul Mayeux
Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Maynard
Ms. Miriam G. McCaffrey
Mrs. Catherine A. McClelland
Mrs. Rennette B. McColloster
Ms. Ruth W. McCollum
Mr. and Mrs. John J.
McCracken, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. McDonald
Mr. Donald McElvy
Mr. and Mrs. William C. McGann
Ms. Glenda McGee
Ms. Kathleen McGlone
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. McKay, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. McKibben
Mr. Alexander P. McLachlan
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H.
McLaughlin
Mr. James I. McLeaish
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan McLellan
Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. McNally
Mrs. Lise McStravick
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Mears
Dr. and Mrs. Steven O. Medo, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P.
Meibaum
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Melancon
Ms. Emilia B. Meno
Mr. Rene P. Meric, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel B. Merritt
Mrs. Helga Merzario
Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Metz, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Metzler
Mrs. Josephine Mically
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Michelli
Mr. and Mrs. Rocco Miele
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Miller
Mr. Daniel W. Miller
Ms. Janell A. Miller
Miss Helen Minchak
Mrs. Mary Anna Miranne
Mr. and Mrs. David Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Mollere
Mrs. Delores P. Montgomery
Ms. Claudia M. Montoya
Mr. and Mrs. Maxime J. Montz, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Moore
Mrs. Vivian B. Moran
Mrs. Jo Anna T. Moreland
Mr. and Mrs. Louis F. Moreno
Ms. Michelle A. Morgan
Ms. Trudy Morris
Mrs. Lucile B. Morris
Miss Sara E. Moseley
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Moseley, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Moser
Mrs. Maryann Moul
Mrs. Carolyn C. Moynan
Dr. Leonard A. Mueninghoff
Hon. and Mrs. Salvadore T. Mule
Mr. and Mrs. W. Austin Mulherin
Ms. Margaret G. Mullahy
Mr. Mark D. Mungello, Esq.
Mr. Roger J. Murphy
Ms. Sheri R. Murray
Dr. James J. Murtagh
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony D. Musco
Mr. and Mrs. Lovell J. Muse
Dr. Ellyn Zunker Musser
Mrs. Frances Mustachia
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Myrick
Mr. and Mrs. Bela I. Nagy
Mr. and Mrs. Bela Nagy, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Naquin
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Nash
Mr. and Dr. Dean Navarre
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Neilson
Drs. Lynne and Harold
Neitzschman
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Nelson, Jr.
Mrs. Marion B. Nesanovich
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Nesser, Sr.
Mrs. Cynthia C. Nevetral
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Newell
Dr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Noland
Mr. Brian C. Nores
Mrs. Hilda J. Obiol
Mr. Keith T. O’Brien
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis E. O’Connell
Mr. Denis C. O’Connor
Ms. Ellen C. Odem
Mrs. Shirley D. O’Dwyer
Ms. and Mr. Mary A. Ojakian
Mr. Michael H. O’Keefe, III
Mrs. Carol Olinde
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Olivier
Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Olivier
Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Olivier, Jr.
Miss Wilna M. Oncale
Ms. Beverly C. O’Neil
Mrs. Ellen O’Reilly
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Ortega, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James O’Toole, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Oubre
Ms. Felicie A. Oubre
Miss Sandra V. Oubre
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Owens
Mrs. Ferdinand W. Oxmann
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Paciera
Mr. and Mrs. Paul P. Palermo
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Park
Ms. Mary Carol Parker
Mrs. and Walter Parlange, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Paschke
Mrs. Hester L. Paternostro
Miss Miriam E. Patron
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Paulhus
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Pavur
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pavur
Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Pellegrini
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Peralla, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Perez
Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Perez
Mr. Louis C. Perrilliat
Mrs. Pearl G. Peterson
Mrs. Margaret Phelan
Mrs. Mary Jane Phelan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Phillips, Sr.
Ms. Katherine H. Phillips
Mr. Maurice J. Picheloup, III
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Piske
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Pitcher
Mr. and Mrs. Marc A. Pizzeck
Sr. Ellen Poche, C.S.J.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon K. Poche, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene O. Ponti
Mrs. Frederick A. Pou
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Pourciau
Mrs. Susan Power
Ms. Sharon M. Prados
Ms. Anne E. Pratka
Mr. and Mrs. James G. Prator
Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Prejean
Mrs. Dorothy S. Price
Ms. Mary Camille Pridgen
Mrs. Rebecca F. Prill
Mrs. Mary A. Prior and Family
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Pugil
Ms. Annina P. Punaro
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 29
Annual
Report
Mrs. Mary K. Pye
Sr. Rose M. Quilter, R.S.C.J.
Mr. Xavier T. Quiroz
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Raab
Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Rabalais
Mrs. Michelle Radcliff
Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Railsback
Mrs. Irene Garcia Ramirez
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Frank T. Ratchford
Mr. and Mrs. David M. Rave
Mrs. Sarah Ray
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Rayer, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon J. Raymond, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Raziano
Mr. Wayne Rebaldo
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Redmann
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Reid, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Reid, Jr.
Mr. Marion B. Reine
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome R. Renaudin
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Resignola
Mrs. Clare D. Restrepo
Mrs. Beverly Reuther
Mr. Jeremy M. Reuther
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll C. Rhodes
Mr. and Mrs. Hal S. Richardson
Mrs. Gladys G. Rigler
Ms. Sandra A. Riley
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Rinker
Mr. Francis A. Ritchie
Mrs. Ruby D. Roberts
Mrs. Blanche E. Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. Steve R. Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B.
Rochelle, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Rodriguez
Mrs. Linda Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll L. Rogers, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Rokoske
Dr. and Mrs. Michael F. Romaine
Ms. Dolores R. Rosselli
Mr. Lawrence D. Roubion, Jr.
Col. Alvin S. Rousse
Mrs. Eva B. Rowntree
Mr. and Mrs. Lennie J. Roy
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Ruffing
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Russo
Mr. and Mrs. Santo J. Russo
Mr. Anthony Russo
Mrs. and Mr. Lynn A. Russom
Sr. Mary Janet Ryan
Sr. Cynthia Sabathier, C.S.J.
Mr. and Mrs. (†) Joseph R. Sabin
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Sacco
Mrs. Mary Safchuk
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Samaha
Mr. and Mrs. Rene F. Sanchez
Mr. and Mrs. Allan J. Sanders
Mr. and Mrs. A. Lester Sarpy
Dr. and Mrs. Don R. Saucier
Ms. Luann Sauer
Mrs. Lorraine K. Sauvage
Mr. and Mrs. Rullell K. Schafer
Mr. and Mrs. Jay R. Schaffer
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Scheidt
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Schenack
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J.
Schexnaydre
Mrs. Helen S. Schindler
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Schittone, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Schmeltz
Ms. Franzi J. Schmid
Dr. and Mrs. Glenn V. Schmidt
30 The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011
Mr. and Mrs. Klaus K. Schmiegel
Mr. and Mrs. Stanford A.
Schneider
Mrs. Shirley R. Schneider
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Schneider
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard R.
Schnexsnayder
Mr. Patrick A. Schnitzius
Mr. Albert Schof
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Schof, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Schott, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. Schott
Mrs. Fay T. Schroeder
Mr. Kenneth Schroer
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald B. Schulz
Mr. Gary J. Schwartz, Sr.
Ms. Anne G. Schwind
Mrs. Celeste Sciortino
Mrs. Maria F. Scott
Mr. Neal Seago
Mr. Robert E. Seng
Mr. and Mrs. James V. Serio, Jr.
Miss Myrtle M. Servat
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P.
Seybold, Jr.
Ms. Elizabeth D. Shaffette
Mrs. Lorienne C. Sharp
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Shaw
Dr. and Mrs. John D. Shea
Mrs. Ruby H. Sheefel
Mr. Thomas W. Shepard, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Z. Sheppard, Sr.
Mr. Joel Sherman
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Shidisky
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Shopoff
Mr. and Mrs. Tom J. Siegwald
Mr. and Mrs. Adriano Simi
Miss Maude M. Simon
Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Simoneaux
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley M. Simpson
Ms. Cathy T. Slumber
Mrs. Yolanda G. Slutsky
Sr. Mary J. Smith, C.S.J.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Smith
Ms. Ester A. Smith
Mrs. Carolyn H. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Smith
Mrs. and Mr. Joan F. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. David Snowdy
Dr. Nancy R. Sodeman
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Sonier
Mr. Daniel U. Spano
Ms. Barbara Spatzer
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Spaulding
Ms. Cassandra L. Splaine
Mr. Gabriel St. Arneault
Ms. Ann G. St. Ledger
Miss Carol A. St. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Roman J. Stachowiak
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Stanton
Mr. and Mrs. Mihali R. Stavlas
Mr. James E. Steckel
Ms. Patricia A. Stephens
Mrs. Betty J. Stevens
Mrs. Louise L. Stewart
Dr. Marilyn V. Stewart
Miss Effie M. Stockton
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Straigis
Mrs. Frances M. Strayham-Walsh
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore G. Strenski
Mr. John J. Stuart
Mr. Stephen B. Stuart
Mr. and Mrs. William Suire
Mr. James R. Sullivan
Mrs. Mary S. Sullivan
Sr. Patricia Sullivan, C.S.J.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Szluk
Ms. Donna Szpinalski
Mr. Abel A. Tabet
Mr. (†) and Mrs. James K. Taggart
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Talbot, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Tandoc
Mrs. Roberta Ann Tarcza
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Tassin
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Taylor
Mrs. Kathleen W. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Andre F. Theriot, Jr.
Mr. Raymond J. Theriot
Ms. Celia M. Thibodeaux
Ms. Patricia A. Thiele
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Thieler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Thoman
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher T.
Thomas
Col. John P. Thomas
Miss Melinda A. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M.
Thomas, Sr.
Mrs. Leslie D. Thornbury
Ms. Marie Tobin
Mr. Thomas F. Todd
Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Toledano
Mr. and Mrs. Walter S.
Tomenson, Jr.
Miss Kathleen G. Toups
Miss Ione R. Trahan
Mr. and Mrs. Horace E. Trepagnier
Miss Alicia Trevino
Mr. and Mrs. Cesar Trimble
Mr. and Mrs. Al Tripp
Ms. H. Christine Truxillo
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Tufts
Mr. Michael R. Tugman
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Turner, Jr.
Ms. Kathleen M. Turner
Mr. William F. Uber, Jr.
Mr. Miguel Uria
Mr. and Mrs. Roberto G. Valdez
Mrs. Mary Ann Valentino
Mrs. Kathy Valladao
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A.
Van Loo, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Douglas Vance
Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Vance
Ms. Cheryl Vander Linden
Rev. James F. Vanderholt
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Varisco, Jr.
Mrs. Juana A. L. Vassallo
Mr. and Mrs. Mills Vautrot
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Vezina, Sr.
Mrs. Deborah A. Vicknair
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew S. Vigier
Mr. and Mrs. Raymundo Villalobos
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Villarrubia
Mrs. Mary B. Vincent
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Vitullo
Dr. Lydia J. Voigt
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wadge
Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Wagner
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S.
Waguespack
Mrs. Sandra C. Walker
Miss Laura M. Wallace
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walner
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Francis M. Walsh
Ms. Sarah Walsh
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Walther
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Watsey
Mr. and Mrs. Sumner R. Watson
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Watts
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Webb
Mrs. Ninette P. Webster
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Weed
Mr. Frederick J. Wehle, Sr.
Mr. Erin M. Weigele
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Wellman
Mr. and Mrs. Adam J. Werling
Mrs. Catherine Wertschnig
Mr. and Mrs. David H. Wessel
Mr. and Mrs. Russell A. West
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Wheeler
Mr. and Mrs. Russell P. White
Mr. Frederic A. Whiting, III
Mrs. Cornelia M. Whitlow
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Whitty
Dr. and Mrs. Klaus C. Wiemer
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Wightkin
Dr. William E. Wilkin
Mrs. Tillie C. Will
Ms. Eunice Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Brian L. Williams
Ms. Vicki Willis
Mr. and Mrs. Kent Willoughby
Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Wilson
Ms. Ellen L. Windstein
Mrs. Elaine L. Wingerter
Mrs. Jane L. Wingerter
Mr. and Mrs. H. Harbour Winn, III
Mr. Albert J. Winters, Jr.
Mr. Norman L. Wirth
Dr. and Mrs. Rudolph W.
Woessner
Mr. J. Fred Woessner
Mr. Andre V. Wogan
Mrs. Mignon C. Wolfe
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Wolfe
Ms. Susan Woods
Ms. Connie Wories
Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Wright
Mrs. Sheila Xitco
Mrs. Rosa E. Yanez
Mr. and Mrs. Armanto A. Yaniero
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Yarsa
Ms. Pauline N. Yerby
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore C.
Young, III
Mrs. Annette T. Young
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Zacary
Miss Sylvia Zamarripa
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Zaunbrecher
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold J. Zimmerman
Ms. Susan R. Zinni
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Joseph S.
Zuppardo
Anderson Family Living Trust
Eustis Insurance, Inc.
Holy Name of Jesus Church, New
Orleans, La.
JLH Consultants, Inc.
Morgan Electric, INC
Planning Associates of LA, LLC
Sisters of Mercy
Sisters of St. Joseph
St. Clare’s Monastery
St. Mary Magdalene Catholic
Church
Statistics of Income Division
Waldo Brothers, Inc.
$24.99 & under
Miss Rita M. Abadie
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas S. Accardo
Mr. and Mrs. Erick L. Aertker
Ms. Elizabeth A. Ahern
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. Amato
Mr. and Mrs. David Arbo
Mrs. Janis H. Aslett
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Assereto
Mrs. Nathima H. Atchoo
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Audibert
Ms. Ladella M. Babb
Mrs. Junette B. Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Baker
Mrs. Mary E. Ballard
Mr. and Mrs. Roger H. Balser
Mrs. Rose Barber
Mr. James L. Barousse
Mr. Ferdinand H. Barre
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Barry
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Wascaser
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Bebout
Ms. Ora Lee Beebe
Ms. Bertha Belmontes
Sr. Arnold Benedetto, O.P.
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Benson, III
Mrs. Anna G. Bergeron
Ms. Yvette M. Bergeron
Mrs. Jacqueline L. Berry
Mrs. Eugenie M. Betzer
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Bisbee, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Blanco
Mrs. Maxine A. Blum
Ms. Jackie Boennighausen
Mr. and Mrs. Milton J. Bolling, III
Mr. and Mrs. Mikel G. Bonano
Mrs. David J. Bondy, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Bondy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Boovy
Ms. Ana M. Bosch
Mrs. Lynne Bothman
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Boudreaux
Mrs. Patricia B. Boudreaux
Miss Gloria T. Bourgeois
Ms. Donna Bourgeois
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Bowman
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney A. Bretz
Senator and Mrs. Armand J.
Brinkhaus
Mrs. Becky Broussard
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Broussard
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Brown, II
Mrs. Mary F. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Browning
Mrs. Suzanne M. Brubaker
Sr. Florence Bryan, S.S.J.
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Buckley
Mrs. Vivian C. Buckley
Mrs. Marilyn K. Bulliard
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M.
Bullinger, Sr.
Ms. Margaret B. Bulman
Mrs. Louise E. Burnett
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Cacciatore
Mrs. Mary O. Cain
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Calhoun
Ms. Helen N. Cambalik
Mr. Armand M. Cantrelle
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Canzonire
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco J.
Cardelle, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Daivd Carlisle
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Caron
Ms. Therese L. Caron
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Carroll
Mrs. Emily F. Carroll
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Carson
Mr. Joseph M. Carter
Mr. and Mrs. Marcel J. Casadaban
Ms. Leslie A. Casden
Mr. Joseph L. Cassiere
Ms. Anna M. Castell
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Castine, Jr.
Ms. Maria Catalano
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Caverly
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice S. Cazaubon
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cerniglia
Ms. Virginia A. Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Delton R. Charles
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J.
Charpentier
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Chartier
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence J. Chavez
Mrs. Jane R. Cherry
Mrs. Roberta G. Chevis
Mr. William M. Clark
Mr. Emery Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Clesi, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Clifton
Ms. Sally Coca
Mr. and Mrs. J. Rene Coman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Cook, Jr.
Ms. Jennifer J. Cooke
Mr. Oscar L. Corde
Ms. Norma Cortez
Ms. Catherine Courrege
Mr. Leo W. Critcher
Mrs. Bernice Cross
Mr. John C. Cross, Jr.
Mrs. Joffre J. Crouere †
Sr. Heloise Cruzat, O.P.
Ms. Martha L. Cuccia
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Daly, Jr.
Mrs. Aline W. Dastugue
Mr. C. E. Delacroix, III
Mr. and Mrs. Gerard A. Delatte
Mr. and Mrs. Gary J. Desjardins
Mr. and Mrs. Domiano L. Di Pascal
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton H. Diggs, Sr.
Sr. Maureen Dorr, O.S.F.
Mr. Gene F. Draghetti
Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Drawe
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Dreher, Jr.
Mrs. Maureen Droge
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Drumm
Mrs. Elaine L. Dugas
Mr. and Mrs. Brian L. Duhe
Ms. Ann Dupre
Mrs. Betty Dupree
Mrs. Irene S. Durio
Mrs. Rose P. Ebarb
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Eddy
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Edwards
Mrs. Mary B. Edwards
Sr. Dehra M. Elliot, C.S.J.
Mr. and Mrs. Norbert L. Elliot, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Elsner
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Escamilla, Jr.
Ms. Natalia F. Escandon
Ms. Vera Tuozza Esposito
Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Francis X.
Fabacher, Jr.
Mrs. Doris Farmer
Dr. and Mrs. Luis E. Fernandez
Ms. Joyce D. Finicle
Mrs. Joan T. Flanagan
Mrs. Joyce C. Fontenelle
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Foret
Ms. Christine G. Foss
Mrs. Betty W. Fowler
Mrs. Sally T. Fradella
Mr. E. F. Frantz
Ms. Clara G. Frechette
Mr. and Mrs. David M. French
Mrs. Angela P. Frost
Mrs. Marguerite L. Fry
Mrs. Margaret M. Fuller
Mr. H. J Gagnet
Ms. Elizabeth A. Gallmann
Dr. Armando A. Garcia
Dr. and Mrs. Lathan W. Garcia
Deacon and Mrs. Henry A. Garon
Ms. Pamela T. Garrison
Mrs. Mary N. Gelpi
Mrs. Beverly G. George-Cowart
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn M. Georgia
Mrs. Anna Belle Giardina
Mrs. Frank J. Giardina
Mr. and Mrs. Cartan L. Gibbons
Mr. and Mrs. Verne B. Gifford, Jr.
Ms. Joy F. Gilmore
Mrs. Maureen Gilroy
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Glueck
Miss Mary Gonzales
Ms. Linda A. Gonzalez
Ms. Dolores R. Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. Goodwin
The Grant Family
Mrs. Vance T. Greene, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Gregory
Mrs. Patricia A. Griffin
Sr. Mary Valerie Gros, O.Carm.
Mrs. Loretta A. Guidroz
Mr. Thomas J. Halliburton
Mrs. Patricia L. Harold
Mr. H. Gordon Hartman
Mrs. Shirley Mae Hatcher
Mr. Malcolm J. Hebert
Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Hebert
Ms. Frances E. Hecker
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Hencoski
Ms. Georgina C. Hernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick C.
Hornberger
Ms. Lucille Howart
Ms. Donna Howell
Mrs. Jacqueline H. Howell
Ms. Patricia A. Hudson
Mr. Hal C. Hudson
Mr. and Mrs. Juan B. Ibieta, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Juan B. Ibieta, III
Mrs. Margaret Israel
Mr. David M. Jamail
Mr. Alfred S. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Josselyn
Mrs. Goldie W. Jouandot
Ms. Mary E. Journey
Ms. Deborah B. Junot
Mr. Charles J. Kacir
Dr. Meyer Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Kiefer
Mr. Jeffrey Kiefer
Ms. Loretta K. Krasnow
Mr. William A. Kroetz
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Lade
Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. LaForge
Mr. and Mrs. F. A Landry, Jr.
Miss Vivian M. Langley
Ms. Frances Lavergne
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Leach
Mrs. Odile B. Leaumont
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Leavitt, III
Mr. Daniel LeBlanc
Mr. and Mrs. James Lenzo
Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Lipps, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. David H. Littlejohn
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent B. LoCoco
Lt. Col. and Mrs. Roy S.
Lombardo, Jr.
Miss Carol A. Long
Mrs. Betty N. Loor-Dowd
Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Louviere, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lovett
Mr. and Mrs. Jake B. Lowenhaupt
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Luzarraga
Mr. and Mrs. James Mackie, Jr.
Mrs. Marguerite Mader
Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Maestri III
Ms. Anne S. Mahia
Mrs. Myrtle Malbrue
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Maleck
Mrs. Grace Mamer
Mr. Jeffery J. Mandel
Mr. Earl L. Mangin
Mr. William J. Marak
Mr. Henry F. Marchigiano
Mrs. Irene Mariano
Mr. and Mrs. Paul P. Marks
Ms. Ashley Marler
Mrs. Elizabeth Marquis
Mr. and Dr. Cedric D. Martin
Mrs. Mary A. Martinez
Mr. Jose A. Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. John V. Matassa
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Matt
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Maynard
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. McConnon
Mrs. Marguerite M. McCormick
Mr. Dennis P. McCrossen
Mrs. Margaret R. McGinn
Mr. Charles J. McGinty
Dr. F. King McGoey, Jr.
Ms. Christina McGovern
Mrs. Ellen V. McKeon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. McLean
Mr. Rick Meier
Ms. Gayle A. Melville
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Mikulich
Ms. Cecile B. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Miller
Mrs. Jeanne M. Minnick
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Mixon
Mrs. Nadia Moise
Sr. Elizabeth Morgan, S.S.N.D.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Mossinghoff
Ms. Rosemarie Mosteller
Mrs. Louise B. Mount
Mr. and Mrs. Samir C. Mowad, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis A. Mueller
Sr. Mary Murray
Mrs. Betty L. Murray
Sr. Nell Murray
Mr. and Mrs. Russell D. Murtha
Ms. Sonya M. Myers
Ms. Nancy Myers
Mr. Clyde J. Nary
Miss Mary A. Navarra
Mrs. Alice V. Navarre
Ms. Adeline Netter
Mr. Charles R. Nettles
Mrs. Marilyn K. Neville
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Newman
Ms. Lyn Northam
Mr. and Mrs. Gary B. Nunemacher
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Nunez
Ms. Vicki O’Donnell
Mrs. Juanita O’Dwyer
Ms. Donna Oliver
Mr. and Mrs. Lazaro Olvera
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V.
Openlander and Family
Ms. Ellen B. O’Reilly
Mrs. Lorraine V. Oubre
Ms. Mary A. Palori
Mr. Nicholas P. Panza and Family
Mr. Joseph Pao
Mrs. Anna G. Papania
Ms. Patricia Patterson
Mrs. Pearl H. Paul
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pawlowicz
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Peeples
Mrs. Adelaide C. Pendleton
Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. Penney
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Perez
Dr. and Mrs. Antonio R. Perez
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Picou
Mr. Paul C. Pistorius
Mr. John C. Pittman
Ms. Teresa Popkin
Mr. John R. Porter
Mrs. Jacquelin W. Potts
Mrs. Jeanne G. Poynot
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Prat
Mr. and Mrs. Albert A. Prats
Mrs. Arine L. Prejean
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Price
Rev. Gerald A. Prinz
Ms. May Prior
Ms. Vinzi Provenza
Mr. and Ms. Alfred E. Purcell, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Quinn
Mr. Joseph Rampulla
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Randall
Mrs. Helen Rauschuber
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald D. Reinhardt
Mrs. Betty A. Rhodes
Mrs. Inez H. Rhodes
Mrs. Mildred W. Rizzo
Mrs. Charles J. Rizzo
Ms. Wildie D. Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. Ulysse Robichaux
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Robinson
Mrs. Lorraine Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R.
Romagossa
Ms. Joyce A. Romano
Mr. and Mrs. Allen M. Rome
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. Rousseau
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew F. Rousso
Dr. and Mrs. Walter Rubin
Ms. Violet S. Rybak
Mrs. Rachel M. Sabetta
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph M. Salvato
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Sands and
Family
Kenneth J. Sapia
Mrs. Ethel B. Schisler
Mr. Louis A. Schisler
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard A. Schlak
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Schmidt
Mr. Sidney E. Schmitt
Ms. Susan Schnieders
Mr. Albert H. Schof, Jr.
Mrs. Herman E. Schrecker
Ms. Peggy A. Schulin
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Scott
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Segar
Mr. and Mrs. Philip E. Seghers
Mrs. Ellen Seitz
Mrs. JoAnne Setecka
Capt. Samuel M. Shelton, USN
(Ret.)
Ms. Fannie J. Simoneaux
Ms. Martha I. Skinker
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. Sloane
Miss Carolyn R. Smith
Mrs. Eugene Smith, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Spadaro
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Spansel
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Spargo
Miss Theresa Speziale
Mrs. Deborah Spicer-Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Springer
Mr. Clarence J. Steeg
Mr. and Mrs. William K. Storey
Mrs. Beverly L. Stuart
Mrs. Patricia B. Stuart
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Talbot
Mrs. Alice Ann Teneyck
Mrs. Maria H Torres
Mrs. Evelyn Treuting
Mrs. Yvonne Troxler
Ms. Maria T. Unsold
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Valdes
Ms. Melanie Vaughn
Ms. Theresa Viator
Sr. Mary Victor, R.S.M.
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Vidacovich
Mr. and Mrs. Guillermo Vidaud
Ms. Gayle N. Viles
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Villemarette
Mrs. Kathleen L. Virden
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald W. Vocke
Ms. Elizabeth Vollenweider
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene P.
Waguespack
Mrs. Mary K. Wall
Mrs. Jacqueline L. Warnock
Mr. Louis G. Wasson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watrous
Mr. and Mrs. Westley West
Mr. and Mrs. Gates H. Whitaker
Ms. Elizabeth A. Whitman
Mrs. Mary E. Wilkie
Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Wille, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll G. Williams
Mrs. and Mr. Julie A. Wilson
Mrs. Rosemary Wilson
Mrs. Aline Wilson
Mr. John Wyzalek
Mr. (†) and Mrs. Guillermo Yanez
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Zito
† deceased
The Southern Jesuit Spring 2011 31
Jesuits of the New Orleans Province
Non-Profit
Organization
U.S. Postage
PAID
New Orleans, LA
Permit No. 137
Office of Advancement
710 Baronne Street, Suite B
New Orleans, LA 70113-1064
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Jesuit
c o n n e c t i o ns
2011
What do
Neil Armstrong,
Tom Hanks
and the Jesuits
Jesuit Jubilee have in common?
honoring 23 Jesuits with a combined 1,350 years of
service to the Church and Society
Sunday, July 31
3:00 p.m. Mass
Jesuit Church of the Immaculate Conception
130 Baronne Street • New Orleans
For more information on this event,
or to make honorary donations,
please visit our website at www.norprov.org
or call us at 1-800-788-1719.
Turn to page 3 to find out.