Ignatian Imprints Autumn 2009

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IMPRINTS A publication of the Maryland Province Jesuits Autumn 2009 | Vol. 4 No. 1 Ignatia n Ignatian Spirituality Conference Page 3 | Honor Roll of Donors Page 13 The Extravagance of God Page 10

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A quarterly magazine of the Maryland Province of the Jesuits

Transcript of Ignatian Imprints Autumn 2009

Page 1: Ignatian Imprints Autumn 2009

IMPRINTSA publication of the Maryland Province Jesuits

Autumn 2009 | Vol. 4 No. 1

Ignatian

Ignatian Spirituality Conference Page 3 | Honor Roll of Donors Page 13

The

Extravagance of God Page 10

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Now& then

Moving In Day at Georgetown Prep— Although the sports jackets and dresses worn on Moving In Day at Georgetown Prep in the early 1960s (left photo) have been replaced by shorts and sneakers, the corridors of Boland Hall remain a place to meet new people and catch up with old friends as they did when the new school year got underway Aug. 30 (top photo). Boland Hall is Georgetown Prep’a main residence for students as well as the main administrative building on the North Bethesda, Md., campus.

Photos courtesy Brian Gnatt, Georgetown Preparatory School

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IMPRINTSIgnatian Imprints is a publication of the Maryland province of the Society of Jesus. Now published as an insert to Company magazine, Ignatian Imprints is designed to highlight the works and people of the province engaged in spreading the Ignatian goal of forming “men and women for others.” Published quarterly, the magazine endeavors to inform, teach and spread the Good News.

James M. Shea, SJ

Provincial

Mary K. Tilghman

Editor and Designer

Ed Plocha

Director of Advancement

Betty Shenk

Advancement Assistant

Joe Young

Web Editor

Please send subscription re-quests, letters to the editor and other correspondence to:Ignatian Imprints6800 LaSalle Road, Suite 620Towson, MD 21286443-921-1310www.mdsj.org

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Richard J. Curry, SJ, was or-dained to the priesthood at Holy Trinity Church in Georgetown, Washington, D.C, onSept. 13, at 7:30 p.m. The Most Rev. Timothy P. Broglio, Archbishop for Military Services, presided.

Following ordination, Fr. Curry offered Masses of Thanksgiving Sept. 20, at Holy Trinity Church, Washington, D.C.; Sept. 27, at Old St. Joseph’s Church, Philadel-phia, and Oct. 4 at St. Ignatius Loyola Church, New York City.

Fr. Curry, a na-tive of Philadelphia and a Jesuit since 1962, is the found-er-director of the National Theatre

Workshop of the Handicapped in New York City and director of the Jesuit Academy for Veterans at Georgetown University in Wash-ington, D.C. He has also published books on Jesuit bread making and soup making and founded a bakery to support people with disabilities, and works with military chaplains on post-traumatic stress syndrome and spirituality.

Brother Richard J. Curry ordained a priest

Photos by William Rickle, SJ

Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio anoints the hands of Richard Curry, SJ, at his ordination to the priesthood. Below, Fr. Curry poses with family members, Archbishop Broglio and James M. Shea, SJ, provincial of the Maryland Province

aroundthe province

Ignatian

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around the provinceFr. O’Brien to work with WJU alumniJames O’Brien, SJ, has been named

special assistant for alumni relations at Wheeling Jesuit University. Fr. O’Brien will work 10-15 hours a week, assisting Kelly Klubert ’85, director of advance-ment and alumni relations, with her work in developing active alumni chapters in Wash-ington, D.C.; Baltimore; and Cleveland. Fr. O’Brien will also work with currently active alumni chapters, offering guidance, support and encouragement.

Fr. O’Brien has taught at Wheeling for 47 years and remains active as a professor in the philosophy department. He has a strong interest in justice and peace issues and is well known for his service trips to assist the underserved in southern West Virginia. Ignatian spirituality series set

Loyola Blakefield will sponsor a series of pre-sentations on the Ignatian Vision and Mission. This year, these presentations will center on the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius Loyola, the seminal work which forms the basis of Ignatian Spirituality. Speakers participating in this year’s program are:

• J-Glenn Murray, SJ, who will speak onThursday, Oct. 22 on Gratitude;

• HowardGray,SJ,whowillspeakonThurs-day, Dec. 3, on Healing;

• Dr.TimMuldoon,whowillspeakonThurs-day, March 4, on the Call; and

• Dr. Ronald Modras, who will speak on

Thursday, May 6 on Co-Laboring. These talks will take place in the Chapel of Our

Lady of Montserrat in Burk Hall at Loyola Blake-field at 7 p.m. For details, contact John Weetenkamp, director of Ignatian Mission and Identity, at [email protected] or at 443-841-3524.

Pope blesses Vatican observatoryPope Benedict XVI visited the new headquarters

of the Vatican Observatory at Castelgandolfo Sept. 16. Fr. General Adolfo Nicolas and the Observatory staff were there to welcome the Pope, who blessed the new offices and Jesuit residence which the Vati-can recently renovated for the Observatory in the papal gardens of Castelgandolfo, replacing its offices which were previously located in the papal villa.

Brother Guy Consolmagno, SJ, of the Maryland Province is featured showing the pontiff around in a video taken during the visit. View the video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=CYgIxSdsM08

St. Aloysius marks 150th yearSt. Aloysius Church in Washington, D.C., will

celebrate its 150th anniversary on the weekend of October 16-18. The anniversary Mass will be offered Oct. 18 at 9:30 a.m. Archbishop Donald W. Wuerl of Washington, D.C., will preside and preach. There will be a light reception afterwards. For details, go to www.stalschurchdc.org

First VowsFive Jesuits pronounced First Vows Aug. 15, at Holy Cross Church in Dewitt, N.Y. They are (left to right) John Peck, SJ (MAR), A.J. Rizzo, SJ (MAR), Travis Stoops (MAR), Henry Shea, SJ (MAR) and Dan Corrou, SJ (NEN).

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Seeing God’s workthrough an Ignatian lens

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Jesuits, lay colleagues gather at Fordham Universityto explore how God sees us and how we can see God

Photos by Richard Roos, SJBrian McDermott, SJ, a professor at Loyola College, listens to a participant during the question

and answer session that followed his presentation at the conference on Ignatian spirituality.

By Peter Feuerherd

They included a psychologist from Ecuador, with others coming from as far as California and Canada, and as close as the Bronx. A diverse group, some speaking English, others Spanish, some with doc-torates and others without college degrees, the 430 participants at a conference on Ignatian Spirituality held at Fordham University in June heard how God sees the big picture, and, at the same time, works in the intimate details of business and family life.

Sponsored by the Jesuit Collaborative, a proj-ect of the New York, Maryland and New England provinces, the conference was a second large-scale bringing together of spiritual counselors and oth-ers steeped in Jesuit spirituality. A similar confer-ence was held two years ago at Fairfield University in Connecticut. The Jesuit Collaborative, formed in

2006, promotes Jesuit spiritual practices and educa-tion among clergy and laity.

Keynote speaker Brian McDermott, SJ, professor of theology and pastoral counseling at Loyola Uni-versity in Maryland, told participants to view God’s activity in the world as akin to checking a location via Google Earth, drawing down to a look at a single individual. Father McDermott used the example of “Steve,” the head of Human Resources at a software company navigating through troubled times.

Anxiety in modern timesSteve suffers from a common anxiety among

those, once part of a booming economy, now forced to participate in the lay-offs of valued work colleagues. “He feels he is the object of all kinds of spite and anger,” said Father McDermott, adding that Steve often thinks about questions such as “What is God

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The role of Jesuit spirituality, said Fr. McDermott,

is to help people see how God is working

through individuals and communities to shape lives, despite struggles

and heartache.

Brendan Higgins and James F. Higgins talk during the Friday night social held during the conference.

up to in my company?” “What should I want God to do?” and “Is God abandoning my company?”

The role of Jesuit spirituality, said Father Mc-Dermott, is to help people such as Steve see how God is working through individuals and communi-ties to shape lives, despite struggles and heartache.

Prayer, liturgies and speakers — in both English and Spanish – hammered the point that Ignatian Spiritual-ity, formed in the 16th-century writings of Ig-natius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits, is a means of opening up to God’s presence in the lives of modern people perplexed by difficult times.

The Spanish-lan-guage workshops were particularly popular. For example, a workshop given in Spanish on Ig-natian Discernment by Claudio Burgaleta, SJ, professor of theology at Ford-ham, attracted a crowd that overflowed the hallways, with participants listening intently from chairs set up outside.

The Examen for childrenCarol Mackey Doherty and Molly Zarba, reli-

gious educators at St. Anthony’s Church in Ocean-side, a Jesuit parish on Long Island, emphasized in their workshop that Ignatian spirituality can be made accessible to children as well as mature adults. Ms. Zarba, holding a beach ball in the shape of a globe, indicated how the toy could be used to illustrate a

major tenet of Ignatian spirituality about God’s pas-sionate love for all creation.

At St. Anthony’s, children preparing for first Penance are asked to do their own Examen, an Ig-natian technique in which people are urged to reflect upon their triumphs and failings each day. Children

are taught to use their imagination in their prayer, reflecting upon Scripture passages, such as the parable of the Prodigal Son as a story about God’s mercy and forgiveness.

Allison Thomas, a parishioner at St. Igna-tius Church in Brook-lyn, a Jesuit parish, at-tended the workshop on children’s spirituality, and said that it gave her hope that future gen-erations can retain the treasure of Jesuit spiri-tuality.

“If we introduce this kind of prayer and if we start early, then they will really get it later on in life. They will have a gut feeling of what’s right and what’s wrong,” she said.

Why bowl alone?Another keynote speaker, Anastacio Rivera, SJ,

associate director of the Loyola Institute for Spiri-tuality in Anaheim, Calif., told a Spanish-language group about the insights of Robert Putnam, a Har-vard political scientist, and his theory that Ameri-cans have become too individualistic.

Mr. Putnam’s landmark work is “Bowling Alone,” which posits that Americans are more inclined to do

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ignatian spirituality

Jim Conroy, SJ, the newly appointed executive director of the Jesuit Collaborative and Mary-land Jesuit, and Anastacio Rivera, SJ, one of the Spanish-speaking keynote presenters at the conference, receive the gifts during Mass.

things themselves versus relying on others. The end result, as evidenced in bowling alleys, is that people are now less inclined to join leagues and other associations, prefer-ring to bowl on their own. Mr. Putnam says there has been a society-wide breakdown in community activity and social action.

Fr. Rivera said that de-velopment contrasted with Ignatian spirituality and the Gospel of John, which reveals a God who says, “I want com-munity with you. I love you. I want relationship with you.”

Latino immigrants, he said, come to this country with a tradition of strong social and family ties. He warned, how-ever, “We can lose the gift we have been offered,” adding that the choice is stark: “Do we want to be turtles in our shells, or do we want commu-nity?”

Other speakers brought varied perspectives to the theme of Ignatian spirituality.

Charles Moutenot, SJ, president of the Loyola House of Retreats in Mor-ristown, N.J., noted that the Exercises “move us from a narrow piety to an open faith” by encouraging those who undertake them, in the words of Ignatius, to “desire and choose only that which is more condu-cive to the end for which we are created.”

William A. Barry, SJ, co-director of Tertianship for the New England Province of the Jesuits, said that the Ignatian Exercises are based upon “belief that God is active in everyone’s life, that God wants everyone’s friendship.” The Ignatian emphasis on “in-difference,” often misunderstood to mean a detached feeling about matters grave and small, is intended to show us “the blind alleys we go down to assuage the desire for God.”

Lorrette Pierre, director of religious education at St. Ignatius Church, said she came to the conference as a way to develop her own spiritual growth and to see how that could be applied to her work in her Brooklyn parish.

While she had been introduced to Ignatian spir-ituality, in large part because of the Jesuit presence in her parish, she found the conference helpful in put-ting it all into context. “It gave us an opportunity to hear where all this came from,” she said.

James R. Conroy, SJ, executive director of the Je-suit Collaborative, proclaimed the meeting a success. The large turnout, and its ethnic and regional diver-sity, made “the case for broad interest in the Spiritual Exercises,” he said.

The next large-scale conference sponsored by the Collaborative is expected to be held in two years, most likely at a location in the Maryland Province.

Mr. Feuerherd writes from New York.

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‘In love with work Jesuits do’

A.J. Rizzo, SJ, pauses in front of Collins Hall, at Fordham University in Bronx, New York, where the newly vowed Jesuit has begun his studies.Photo courtesy Fordham University, Janet Faller Sassi, photographer

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JESUITS IN FORMATION

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A.J. Rizzo, SJFirst Studies

Only a few days after he pronounced his first vows, A.J. Rizzo, SJ, was moving into his new home in Ciszek Hall at Fordham University where he will begin First Studies, two years of graduate level phi-losophy.

He still had to register for classes, buy his books and do all the things a student does to get ready for a new semester. But already, he was feeling prepared.

“The novitiate, the first two years, have prepared me well for this next step,” he said.

After all the new experiences of these past two years, he’s learned how to adjust, how to feel a little less nervous at new places and new people.

He knows, he said, “God is faithful.”“I have met people who have made my life as a

Jesuit beautiful and full of joy and I have faith that will happen again.”

Mr. Rizzo, a Philadelphia native, spent three years at Loyola Blakefield, a boys preparatory school in suburban Baltimore, before entering the Society of Jesus. At Loyola, he spent a year as assistant to the school’s chaplain, Joseph Michini, SJ, followed by two years as Loyola’s director of Christian service.

A graduate of St. Joseph’s Preparatory School in Philadelphia and the University of Scranton, he has gotten to know Jesuits since he took a summer pro-gram at the Prep before his eighth grade year.

Each experience brought him closer to entering the order. “I first thought about it while I was in high school,” Mr. Rizzo said, remembering “Jesuits at the Prep were real role models for me.”

After working along side Jesuits after college graduation — one year volunteering at the Prep and then three years at Loyola — he “fell in love with the work that the Jesuits do.”

And something more, too. Ignatian spirituality drew him into a closer relationship with God and with the world.

Mr. Rizzo was attracted to the way Jesuits pray and how they see the world. “It spoke to who I am

and who I want to be,” he said.The last two years have been full ones. While

studying at the novitiate in Syracuse, Mr. Rizzo has worked in schools, hospitals and in another coun-try. He spent the spring semester in campus min-istry at Georgetown University. Last fall, he visited patients and distributed communion in a hospital. The previous spring, he worked at Calvary Hospital in the Bronx, where all first year novices spend time working with terminally-ill patients. Five novices provided physical care for patients as nurses aides. The first semester after his entrance into the Society, he taught English and religion in a grade school in Syracuse — and spent the last hour of each school day helping the first graders get their things together to go home.

Every novice makes the 30-day silent retreat, the Spiritual Exercises, and then spends two months in an international apostolic work.

Mr. Rizzo went to Belize. He went, he said, “all charged and excited to live out the Ignatian spiritual-ity.” Most of the time was spent in the Jesuit schools and parishes of Belize City where he worked with people of the parishes and little kids of the schools, “meeting God in the people that God sent my way every day.”

But the highlight was a visit to Mayan villages in Punta Gorda with a classmate. They lived with families, getting to know them, praying with them. “They took wonderful care of us,” he said, profoundly moved by their lack of materialism and the richness of their love. “It was beautiful to be part of that,” he said.

At First Vows, pronounced Aug. 16 in Syracuse, Mr. Rizzo was surrounded by his family — he’s the second oldest of six children — and many of the people from the apostolates where he served. “All my parents and my family want is for me to be happy,” he said, noting the support they’ve given him since he decided to become a Jesuit. At First Vows, they saw how happy Mr. Rizzo is.

While at Fordham, Mr. Rizzo will serve as Jesuit liaison for a Jesuit Volunteers community in Harlem and he hopes for another apostolate in the Bronx.

A.J. Rizzo, SJ, has pronounced his first vowsand is ready for the next step

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Peter Folan, SJSecond Year Regent

Six years after Peter Folan entered the Jesuits, he’s a little more than halfway to ordination. “It’s not like I’m spending 11 years in a holding pattern,” Mr. Folan said. “I have felt since I was a first year novice, I was doing ‘real stuff.’”

Now in his second year as an adjunct professor of philosophy at the University of Scranton, Mr. Fo-lan has ministered both in and outside of the class-room. He helped resettle refugees while studying in Syracuse, serviced in campus ministry at LeMoyne College and later full time at Saint Joseph’s Univer-sity. He tutored in a public high school while study-ing at Fordham University, directed the Maryland

Halfway to ordinationI have felt since I was a first year novice, I was doing ‘real stuff,’ says second year Regent Peter Folan, SJ

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year of teaching introductory classes (five sections) and a logic course.

He’s passionate about the topic he said, and pays attention to university evaluations so he knows what students are thinking as a semester ends.

In addition, he works hard to bring a sense of humor into the classroom — something he said he learned was essential while teaching high school for two years. “I want to keep them interested,” he said.

Luckily, he has his family to thank for helping him develop a sense of humor. “They help me laugh and laugh at myself,” he said. And living in com-munity with Jesuits, helps him sharpen his wit. “You need some of that,” he added.

What’s next? Mr. Folan likes to teach and thinks he’s good at it — but with the Jesuits you just never know what you’ll be asked to do next. And that vari-ety is something he likes.

Some things are certain such as the three re-quired years of theology study. So it will be at least another four, maybe five, years to ordination and plenty of more opportunities to bring the Gospel to people hungry for it.

jesuits in formation

Peter Folan, SJ, speaks with sophomore William Wing and senior Elizabeth Pulice on the campus of The University of Scranton. Photo courtesy of The University of Scranton. Terry Connors, photographer

Province’s Family Retreat Program, spend a summer in India and helped out with the Six Weeks a Jesuit program last summer.

“As a novice I was doing the work that one day I would be doing as a priest,” Mr. Folan said, noting that that knowledge has sustained him through his years of formation.

The Amityville, N.Y., native, who is 31, felt drawn to the priesthood before he considered the Society of Jesus. But it was meeting Jesuits socially and working with a Jesuit while on the staff of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops that led him to the order.

With each step along the way, particularly the monumental moments such as First Vows, he says the answers to why he became a Jesuit change.

And he gets asked about why he wanted to be a priest all the time. He often hears comments such as “You’re such a regular guy; you’re such a normal guy.”

“People are interested in why somebody would do this,” he said. Younger people, both Catholic and non-Catholic, are quick to ask about his religious vo-cation. And Mr. Folan says he welcomes their open-ness and their interest. “I think there’s something re-ally charming about it,” he said.

Learning about Ignatian spirituality, particularly the Spiritual Exercises and the daily Examen, came naturally, said Mr. Folan, a graduate of Chaminade High School and the University of Notre Dame. With his family, he had prayed nightly since he was a little boy and was used to spontaneous prayer.

Ignatian prayer, such as the daily Examen, has required him to examine how God had touched his life during each day and he learned the power of re-flecting on Gospel stories by putting oneself on the scene. “It was a natural fit for me.”

Mr. Folan enjoyed the past year as a philosophy teacher at Scranton and looked forward to another

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Prayer is a dialogue, not a dramatic monologue.

Some Reflectionson the

Extravaganceof God

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IGNATIAN SPIRITUALITY

By Howard Gray, SJ

Ignatius Loyola presumes that the human response to God is to God, not to oneself. Prayer is a dialogue, not a dramatic monologue. Moreover, that response is to something God has revealed to us about our relationship. Too often this response is presented or interpreted as an obligation or a duty.

For example, in the Principle and Foundation we read that we are “to praise, reverence, and serve God our Lord, and by this means to save our soul.” Acting out of love

We can read or hear this to mean that we have a creaturely obligation to be the good creature, i.e., subservient and yielding to the God whose power has made us something out of nothing. While we appreciate that creation is an act of love, lurking in the shadows of our religious consciousness one suspects that this love is, ultimately, an act of obedi-ence, the fulfillment of our creaturely duty. In short, we do not respond to God’s amiability or loveable overtures but to God’s power.

This can be a lovely act of Christian submis-sion, humbly and wholeheartedly embracing what it means to be a creature before the Creator. However, my experience has led me to another kind of inter-pretation, emerging out of the meaning of the term colloquy. What does it mean for a friend to reveal who she or he is to the friend? Revelation is self-disclosure, an opening of identity and the promise that your opening up would be mutually regarded.God teaches us about praise

In that light, then, the Principle and Founda-tion, for example, is first of all about God. The reason we can praise, reverence, and serve is that God teaches us how. This means that creation is

revelation of a God who praises us, reverences us, and serves us — first.

In Genesis God sees everything created as good and finally as very good. I want to suggest that Ignatian prayer begins with our acceptance of this kind of divine disclosure. It also means that God delights not just that there are things out there that God claims as his but that God delights in both the multiplicity and specificity of each created reality: this fir tree, this waterfall, this mountain, this man, this woman. Open to God

Consequently, the discipline of the Exercises is more than locating places and times for prayer. Ignatian discipline begins with letting God open God’s self to us. Stilling the restless compulsion to talk first allows God to be open to us. The rhythm of the Exercises is a movement from God’s self-opening, climaxed in the gift of Jesus the Christ, the total opening of God to us. We look at Jesus first to learn from what he shows us who he really is and what kind of Father God is and what kind of Spirit confirms his presence.

What does Ignatius want us to learn? The extravagance of God that climaxes in the reflections of the Contemplation to Attain Divine Love. All is gift and every gift is divine self-disclosure. There is no end to the ongoing revelation of God. And that, I believe, is why Ignatius so prized the virtue of magnanimity. Magnanimity is our way of partici-pating in God’s extravagance, of finding God in all things.

Howard Gray, SJ, an advisor to the president of Georgetown University, speaks throughout the United States on Ignatian spirituality.

Ignatian discipline begins

with letting God open God’s self to us.

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William A. Ryan, SJ teacher, pastoral minister

William Aloysius Ryan, SJ, a Jesuit for 77 years and a priest for 64 years, died July 19 at age 94.

Fr. Ryan, born in Baltimore Sept. 19, 1914, entered the Society of Jesus in 1932 and was ordained June 17, 1945. Following ordination, Fr. Ryan served as minister to the Jesuit Community at George-town and rector at Georgetown Prep. He then was exec-utive assistant to the president at Saint Joseph’s Univer-sity and spent 13 years at St. Joseph’s Preparatory School teaching Latin, Greek and religion. From 1972 to 1983, Fr. Ryan was secretary general for the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome, established in 1909 by Pope Pius X.

Other assignments included parochial vicar at St. George Church in Glenolden, Pa., assistant director for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s Catholic Information Center, and pastoral minister at Loyola Center at Saint Joseph’s University.

William E. Schaffner, SJ,taught religion, led retreats

William E. Schaffner, SJ, died Sept. 15. A Jesuit for 73 years and a priest for 61 years, he was 91.

William Schaffner, born April 11, 1918, entered the Society July 30, 1935, and was ordained June 20, 1948. Fr. Schaffner was professor of religion at the Univer-sity of Scranton from 1950 to 1956. He was professor of theology at Loyola College and retreat director at Loyola Retreat House 1964-1967. Later assignments took him to St. Ignatius and Corpus Christi churches in Baltimore, Greater Baltimore Medical Center and Wernersville. He returned to ministry in Baltimore from 1979-1993.

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Joseph F. Curran, SJ ministered in Wheeling, Canada

Joseph F. Curran, SJ, died Sept. 3. A Jesuit for 66 years and a priest for 53 years, he was 85.

Born Feb. 2, 1924, he entered the Society of Jesus Feb. 1, 1943, and was ordained to the priesthood June 15, 1956.

Fr. Curran’s assignments included Wheeling Jesuit University where he was a chaplain, and taught political science. He later went to Canada where he was a pastor, hospital chaplain and political science teacher.

Hugh A. Kennedy, SJserved Province for 45 years

Hugh A. Kennedy, SJ, died Sept. 6. A Jesuit for 73 years and a priest for 61 years, he was 90.

Fr. Kennedy, born Oct. 27, 1918, in Braddock, Pa., entered the Society of Jesus Sept. 7, 1935, and was ordained June 20, 1948. Fr. Ken-nedy first served at the Novitiate of St. Isaac Jogues, as Socius (assistant) to the Master of Novices, Sub-minister of the Jesuit Community, teacher of French and Latin and choir director from 1950 to 1955. He became rector of the Jesuit Community at Werners-ville, and in 1962 was named Socius to the Provincial, a position he held until 1980. He became Secretary to the Provincial 1980 to 1996 and Assistant Province Secretary 1996 to 2007, serving the Maryland Province for 45 years — during which time he sang with the Handel Choir of Baltimore and played several instru-ments including the trumpet.

William M. King, SJLoyola, St. Joseph’s professor

William M. King, SJ, died Sept. 3. A Jesuit for 61 years and a priest for 49 years, he was 81.

William King, born April 4, 1928, en-tered the Society July 30, 1948, and was ordained June 19, 1960.

Fr. King taught history and political science at Loy-ola College in Maryland and then went to Saint Joseph’s in Philadelphia to teach history. After earning his Ph.D., he continued teaching at Saint Joseph’s and was director of the university’s London program in 1988-1989. From 1994 to 1995, he worked on the English version of the Historical Dictionary of the Society of Jesus in Rome.

Fr. King later was parochial vicar, guest master and prison minister in Albuquerque.

Joseph L. Quinn, SJ, University of Scranton professor

Joseph L. Quinn, SJ, died Sept. 7, in Scranton. He was 73.

A native of Baltimore, Fr. Quinn en-tered the Society in 1953 and was ordained in 1966. Fr. Quinn joined the University of Scranton in 1978 where for more than 20 years he taught courses on American Literature, Hem-ingway, James, Twain and the Transcendentalists.

In 2000, he co-translated with Midori Yamanouchi, Ph.D., Kike Wadatsumi no Koe (Listen to the Voices from The Sea), a collection of diary entries and letters of uni-versity students in Japan who served in World War II, some as kamikaze pilots.

in memoriam

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Name of Fund ContributorAnna and John Benvegar Mission Fund Anonymous Vitus and Mary Benvegar Memorial Burse Anonymous Dufour Family Memorial Burse Ms. Kathleen Banks Dufour Family Memorial Burse Mr. Gregory DuFour Dufour Family Memorial Burse Ms. Diane Gaudio Dufour Family Memorial Burse Mr. & Mrs. Scott Lammie Dufour Family Memorial Burse Mr. & Mrs. William P. Meehan Dufour Family Memorial Burse Mrs. Kathie Pasquarella Dufour Family Memorial Burse Phipps Conservatory and Botanical GardensDufour Family Memorial Burse Mr. Richard Piacentini Dufour Family Memorial Burse Mrs. Lauren A. Sufrin Dufour Family Memorial Burse Ms. Marilyn S. Yarosz Rev. James B. Horigan, SJ Mr. & Mrs. Karl H. Cerny Judge Jesuit Residence The Charitable Foundation of the Burns Family, Inc.Judge Jesuit Residence Mrs. Marguerite Breimeister Rev. David Madden, SJ Mr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Busillo Rev. Brian A. McGrath, SJ Mr. & Mrs. Karl H. Cerny Sant’ Andrea Guild Burse Sant’ Andrea Society

Through The generous supporT of the following donors, the Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus is able to promote domestic and international minis-tries that provide help to the sick, outreach to the materi-ally poor, education for youth of lower-income families, assistance to vulnerable populations and spiritual direction to those who request it. This honor roll lists contributions and estate gifts received between July 1, 2008, and June 30, 2009. You, our friends, are true collaborators with the Society of Jesus in helping to shape the apostolic character of ministries that you support.

named Funds (sometimes called burses) support the ministries of the Maryland Province Jesuits. These funds can honor a loved one, a family or a Jesuit in perpetuity. Call the Office of Advancement at 443-921-1332 for more information on creating a Named Fund with the Maryland Province Jesuits.

honor roll of donors 2009

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$1,000 to 9,999IndividualsAnonymous (4)Mr. Robert E. BarkerMr. James A. Barrow, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. BeiterMr. & Mrs. Bruce W. BennettMs. Catherine T. BrennanMr. Fred S. BrownMr. & Mrs. Thomas

BrzozowskiMr. Charles J. CapozzoliMr. Timothy J. Capuano

$10,000-99,999IndividualsAnonymous (1)Ladner Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Michael MaceMrs. Marilyn P. MaledonMr. Thomas P. † & Mrs. Maria F. McDermottMrs. Margaret C. Nadler

Estates and TrustAnonymous (2)Estate of Robert L. Carroll

OrganizationsSant’ Andrea Society

$100,000 or moreIndividualsMr. & Mrs. Michael C.

Mauer

Estates and TrustAnonymous (1)Estate of Robert L. McDevittJoseph Pentony Jr. TrustMary V. Quinn Charitable

Fund

FoundationsThe Loyola Foundation, Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Caramanico

Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence A. CarrMiss Ruth CarrollMr. & Mrs. John R. CochranMrs. Mary C. ContiMr. & Mrs. Bernard J. CravathMrs. Mary Kocken Darling†Mr. Robert J. DietrichMrs. Josephine S. DowbenkoMs. Doris E. FernandesMr. & Mrs. Varghese Robert

GeorgeMrs. Margaret J. GibbonsMr. & Mrs. Peter D.

Gomsak, Jr.Mrs. Dorothea S. GuokasMr. Al GuokasDr. & Mrs. James A. HallMr. Detlev V. Hauck†

Mr. Joseph C. Hauf, IIIMs. Cynthia HausmannMr. Richard T. HoriganMs. Andrea M. JonesMr. & Mrs. William S. KanagaMr. & Mrs. William F.

KemptonMr. Walter J. Kenna, Jr.Ms. Mary Virginia KennaRev. James V. Keogh, SJMr. & Mrs. Michael C.

KilmerMr. & Mrs. John F. KleinMs. Mary Shelley Darling

KnachMs. Margaret Ladner and

Mr. Cliff BrittainMr. & Mrs. Ronald LaffeyMr. Tony Lao and

Ms. Leslie DanielsMr. James F. Ludden and

Rev. Carol P. LuddenMr. & Mrs. Bao LuongMs. Josephine M MahaneyMr. Joseph M. McDadeMs. JulieAnn McGrathMr. Joseph P. McGurkMr. & Mrs. William J.

McNamaraMr. & Mrs. Michael E.

MerchentMrs. Jane Merritt

Dr. & Mrs. Richard B. Modjeski

Mr. Alfred MontvilleMr. & Mrs. L. Francis

MurphyCol. & Mrs. Jose R. OliveroDr. Lawrence G. PapeMs. Helene F. PerryMr. & Mrs. Frank

Pilachowski, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Arthur C. PowellMrs. Cathleen L. RooneyMr. & Mrs. Thomas E. ShurerMrs. Barbara A. ShurerMr. & Mrs. David J.

SteinbacherDr. Sachdev P. ThomasMr. & Mrs. Joseph F. TrainorMr. & Mrs. Joseph V.

VicidominoDr. Julio VidaurrazagaMr. William J. WelchMrs. Kathleen G. WillsMr. Joseph S. YacinskiMr. Steven A. ZabickiMr. & Mrs. George M. ZukMr. & Mrs. Edward

Zungailia, Jr.

Estates and TrustEstate of Mary M. HealyThe Mary K. Fleming

Memorial Fund

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14 | Autumn 2009

Estate of Emily BurbachEstate of Antoinette K. NeeEstate of Joan DeJohn Norris

OrganizationsMicrosoft CorporationAccion InternationalBraganza Associates, P.C.Society for The Propagation Of The FaithSt. Alphonsus Rodriguez Parish, Woodstock, MD

FoundationsThe Isabel Allende FoundationThe Charitable Foundation of the Burns Family, Inc.John P. & Anne W. McNulty FoundationAlexander C. & Tillie S. Speyer FoundationThe T.R. Paul Family Foundation

AssociatesGonzaga College High SchoolThe Villiger Guild

$500-999IndividualsAnonymous (3)Mrs. Emma M. AllenMr. & Mrs. Carl J. AmrheinPastor Anita BalyMr. & Mrs. John CallahanMr. John W. CallahanMr. & Mrs. Donald H. ChapinMrs. Helen L. CharetteMrs. Anna B. CliffordMr. & Mrs. Frank B. CondonMr. Robert P. ConnollyMr. & Mrs. Joseph E. CoxMr. Charles B. CummingsMr. & Mrs. John F. CurtisMr. & Mrs. Thomas E. CurtisMr. & Mrs. Joseph G. DeeganMs. Marjorie A. DeitrickDr. James DilorenzoMr. & Mrs. Thomas Arthur

DincherMr. & Mrs. Louis J. DincherMr. & Mrs. Martin C DonzeMr. & Mrs. Matthew DoughertyMr. Frederick W. DreherMr. & Mrs. Robert M. EdmundMr. & Mrs. William J. FesslerMr. & Mrs. Frank Fischer

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas FitzpatrickDr. & Mrs. Edward F. FloodMrs. Mary H. FrankMr. & Mrs. Benedict J.

Frederick, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Brian J. FrisoneMrs. Shannon GallinaMr. & Mrs. John T. Galvin, IIIMr. John P. HacalaMs. Adelaide P. HemphillMrs. Mary V. HofmeisterMr. Frederic J. HueberMr. & Mrs. Cornelis J. JansenMr. John C. KirbyMr. & Mrs. Frank S. LaneMr. John Earl LucasMr. & Mrs. Marcel S. LoboMr. & Mrs. James F. MartinMr. & Mrs. James Michael

MartinMrs. Jane M. McCarthyHon. Stephen J. McEwen, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. MetreyMs. Mildred MillerMr. & Mrs. James F.

MuldowneyMr. & Mrs. Matthew F. MurphyMs. Clara S. NardiniSr. Margaret M. NugentMr. & Mrs. John H. PlunkettMr. & Mrs. James R. PurtillMr. Louis M. Rehak, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. William P. Ryan, Jr.Mrs. Aurora A. SantiagoMr. John C. ShuhlerMr. & Mrs. Carl ShurerMr. & Mrs. Roger L. SlakeyMr. Edward A. SmearmanDr. & Mrs. Edward D. SomaRev. Steven F. Spahn, SJMr. & Mrs. Ralph R. StocktonDr. & Mrs. Stephen P. StoweMrs. Dorothy StrandMr. & Mrs. C. Jerome SullivanDr. Kevin L. SullivanMr. & Mrs. Michael P. SzubaMrs. Marie-Claude TerrotMr. & Mrs. Gino ValentiMr. & Mrs. Paul WangensteinMr. & Mrs. Richard L. WarfieldMrs. Joyce L. WennerMrs. Maria C. WilliamsMr. & Mrs. Robert M. Zanella

Estates and TrustEstate of Anita M. Horigan

OrganizationsSisters of IHM,

Arlington, VASisters of IHM,

Philadelphia, PA

$200-499 IndividualsAnonymous (4) Dr. & Mrs. George D. Balsama Ms. Margaret K. Baumgardner Mrs. Agnes S. Benison Mrs. Helen R. Boarman Dr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Bonomo Mr. Joseph M. Brady Mrs. Peggie Breimeister Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Brennan Mrs. Roseann N. Britcher Ms. Rose A. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. Brzozowski Dr. & Mrs. Edward J. Burkhard Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Burns, III Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Cahill Mr. & Mrs. Bill Calvert Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Campbell Mr. & Mrs. Louis P. Canuso Mr. & Mrs. Joseph V. Capuano Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Carusi Mr. & Mrs. Karl H. Cerny Mrs. Linda M. L. Chang Mr. J. Albert Chatard, Jr. Ms. Teresa M. Colgan Mr. David D. Colgan Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. ConnellyMr. Michael W. CowellMr. & Mrs. Herman L. Crowley, Jr. Mrs. Dorothy A. De Cartagena Mr. & Mrs. Robert Scott DeanMr. & Mrs. Donald DeaneDr. & Mrs. Lawrence B. Dietrich Mr. & Mrs. David A. Dorsey Mr. Donald J. Drabant Mr. & Mrs. John E. Drew Mr. & Mrs. Jack A. DrobnicMs. Josephine Merrick Dudra Mr. & Mrs. Anthony G. Durmowicz Mr. & Mrs. E. J. Dvorscak Ms. Charlene M. Eiswerth Mr. & Mrs. John T. Elson Mr. & Mrs. John T. Enoch Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth R. Eshelman Mr. & Mrs. Christopher J. EspyMr. & Mrs. Robert J. FitzmyerMrs. Julia W. Flaxel Ms. Margaret R. Foley Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. GannonMs. Joanne Gilmore Mr. & Mrs. Calvin T. Godfrey

Ms. Karen M. Golz Mr. J. Michael Gomsak Mr. & Mrs. John K. Greaney Mrs. Margaret M. Grega Col. & Mrs. John C. Griffin Mr. Thomas E. Hagenbach Mr. & Mrs. James A. Hanlon Mr. & Mrs. William F. Henderson, Jr.Mrs. Georgette HenryMrs. Jean S. Horak Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Horstmann Ms. Carol F. Hosey Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Howser, Jr. Mr. Donald R. Hughes Mr. & Mrs. Jason L. Hurd Dr. & Mrs. Francis G. HuriteMr. & Mrs. David S. Jernigan Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kahn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kenneth Kanai Mrs. Valerie G. Kanouse Balsama Mrs. Janice S. Karavassily Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J. Katrosh Mrs. Patricia L. Kelleher Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph KempterMr. Joseph R. Kenna Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Kenna Mrs. Eileen T. Kennedy Mr. J. Frank Keohane Mr. & Mrs. Ban-An Khaw Ms. Margaret Mary KielyMr. & Mrs. Henry V. King, Jr. Mr. William H. Kirvan Mr. & Mrs. Timothy J. KlarichMr. & Mrs. W. Richard Kotasenski Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Kourlas Ms. Barbara Krainak Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Ksiazek Mr. & Mrs. Zal Kutar Mr. & Mrs. Carl S. Lander Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Lavelle Mr. & Mrs. Christopher L. Lawlor Mr. & Mrs. Bruce E. Lawyer Mr. Terrence J. Ligday, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Light John and Barbara Linsenmeyer Dr. & Mrs. Donald LoeblMr. & Mrs. Robert W. Lofink Mr. & Mrs. James G. Maguire Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. Mallon Mr. John E. Manley Mr. & Mrs. John C. Martin Mrs. Mary Jo Mathena Ms. Veronica W. Maus Mr. Patrick M. McCauley

Although we strive for accuracy, errors do occur.

Please call 443-921-1332 if your name has been listed

erroneously or omitted.

St. Boniface Church, Williamsport, PASt. Matthew School, Philadelphia, PA

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honor roll of donors 2009

FoundationsThe Scully Family Foundation

$100-199

IndividualsAnonymous (6)Dr. & Mrs. James Abell Mr. & Mrs. James H. AggerMrs. Betty G. AirgoodRev. Bert Akers, SJMr. & Mrs. Walter H.

AllwoerdenMr. & Mrs. John C. AltmillerMrs. Marian E. AltozMr. & Mrs. Anthony E. AluiseMr. & Mrs. Joseph AlvaradoMr. & Mrs. Thomas M.

AngelucciMr. & Mrs. Henry J.

AschenbrennerMs. Constance M. AthensMr. & Mrs. Henry A. BackeMr. & Mrs. R. Tyler BaesmanMr. & Mrs. William Baird, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Michael BanscherMrs. Joanne M. BarryMr. & Mrs. George BeasleyMr. & Mrs. Leif C. BeckMs. Barbara B. BeckerMr. & Mrs. David L. BeeghlyMr. & Mrs. J. Carter BeeseMr. & Mrs. Robert W. BegleyDr. & Mrs. Brent C. Behrens

Dr. & Mrs. Richard A. CloseMr. & Mrs. Jay Gordon CohenMr. & Mrs. James R. ColbeckMr. & Mrs. Robert C. Coleman,

Jr.Mrs. Mary Elizabeth G.

ColganMr. & Mrs. Michael S. CollinsMr. Nicholas P. ContiMr. & Mrs. Alfred A.

Cooke, IIIMrs. Maryann J. CornellMr. & Mrs. Ron CosentinoMrs. Winifred L. CoughlinMr. & Mrs. Dewayne L. CoxMr. Robert L. CreamerDr. & Mrs. Mark J. CrnkovichMr. & Mrs. Thomas R. CrowMs. Elizabeth C. CryerMrs. Eleanor M. CurrieMrs. Jeannette T. CusterMr. & Mrs. Raymond M. DadigMrs. Eileen G. DagitMr. & Mrs. Tim DailyMrs. Joan C. D’AleoMr. Edward J. DeeneyMr. Salvatore DeFazioMr. & Mrs. Richard DegenhardMr. Gerald F. DeitrickMrs. Jean M. DeitrickMr. & Mrs. William P. DelaneyMr. & Mrs. Frank F. DelvauxMs. Katherine A. DemetorMrs. Madeleine Dempsey-

RymarMr. Michael B. DevereuxMs. Margaret Mary DietzMr. & Mrs. Larry J. DincherMrs. Mary E. DincherMrs. Dorothy G. DincherMr. & Mrs. Eugene R. DincherMr. & Mrs. Charles DincherMrs. Catherine B. DoehlerMs. Helenmarie A. DoltonMs. Louisa C. DubinMr. & Mrs. Francis G. DwyerDr. Joseph L. EckenrodeMr. Thomas J. EdwardsMr. Charles R. EgovilleMr. Harry E. EllisMr. & Mrs. James E. EllisMr. & Mrs. John J. Erwin, Jr.Mrs. Jean Everts-PersieMs. Joan Le FaivreMr. & Mrs. John W. FantomMs. Jane F. FarberMr. & Mrs. Charles F. FarrellMr. & Mrs. William F. Fearn

Mrs. Joan M. BellwoarMr. & Mrs. Jose R. BenkiMr. & Mrs. Richard A. BeyerMr. & Mrs. Victor A. BlandinMs. Lucille A. BonacciMr. & Mrs. Andrew

Bonthron, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. John W. Borelli, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Harry F. Boring, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Winslow J. Borkowski, Jr.Mr. John P. BornemanMs. Rosemary W. BowerDr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Boylan,

DDSMr. & Mrs. Francis Xavier

BrackenMrs. Elizabeth J. BrackenMr. Robert P. BradyMr. Patrick A. BradyMr. & Mrs. Anthony R.

Branzell, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. BrewMr. & Mrs. Charles K. BrewsterMs. Diane C. Brown and Mr. Steven B. DuffMr. & Mrs. John F. BrownMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. BrownMrs. Dorothy T. BrownMs. Lucinda BrzozowskiMrs. Mary H. BuchnessMr. Walter BudkoMr. Brent BuescherRev. Sidney C. BurgoyneMr. & Mrs. Thomas W. BurkeDr. & Mrs. James L. BurneMr. Anthony Burns

Mrs. Sophie BurnsMr. & Mrs. Francis J. ButlerHon. J. Norris ByrnesMr. Samuel Cabot, IIIMr. & Mrs. John J. Cahill, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Edward G. Cale, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Rocco CaliendoMr. & Mrs. Michael J. CallahanMs. Anne Marie CampbellMr. & Mrs. Mark A. CapuanoMs. Eileen R. CarpinoBr. Robert L. G. Carson, SJMr. & Mrs. Gerald K. CassidyDr. & Mrs. Joseph G. CesareDr. Mary B. ChagnonMr. & Mrs. Francis A. CiepielaMr. Joseph F. CiminiMrs. Luane M. CindeaMr. & Mrs. Albert A. ClappsMr. & Mrs. Frank P. Clarke

Mr. Louis G. McComas Mr. Eugene McGurrin Mr. & Mrs. Michael McMahon Mrs. Eithne M. McMullen Ms. Kathryn W. McNeal Dr. & Mrs. Desmond P. McNelisMr. & Mrs. John J. Mellon Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Milan Mr. & Mrs. Harold T. MillerMr. John R. Mitchell Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. Mount, Jr. Mr. Joseph F. Mugford Mrs. Mary J. Murray Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Musson Dr. & Mrs. Floyd T. Nasuti Mr. & Mrs. Mark E. Nesfeder Mr. Nseobong I. Ntukidem Mrs. Elizabeth O’Brien Mr. & Mrs. William B. O’Connell, Jr. Mrs. Joan E. O’Connor Mr. & Mrs. John J. O’Mara Ms. Mary T. O’Neill Mr. James M. O’Neill Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. O’Neill Mr. Francesco G. Pace Ms. Mary Elaine Partridge Mr. & Mrs. Bruce M. Pearson Mr. & Mrs. Wardner G. Penberthy Mr. Daniel J. Polacek Ms. Elissa J. Proto Ms.Caroline Ramos and Mr. Michael Wallenhorst Mr. & Mrs. Michael J.

Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Leo J. Rogers, Jr. Mrs. Annemarie RogersMs. Sissy Rothwell Mrs. Sharon S. Saia Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Sandman Mr. & Mrs. Indranil Sanyal Mr. Carl Schubert Dr. Henry H. Scofield Dr. & Mrs. Hoan Seng Tan Mrs. Mary K. Sheehan Mr. Samuel C. Shialabba, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Short Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Shurer Mr. & Mrs. Daniel R. Shurer Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Smith Ms. Regina R. Smutz Mr. Michael J. Stephan Mr. & Mrs. Robert Strawbridge Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Sweeney Mrs. Justine O. Veith Mr. & Mrs. R. R. Vemuganti Ms. Lois Von Nostitz Mr. & Mrs. Leroy A. Wagner

Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Weirman Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Weitz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Welch Mr. Michael A. Wincek Mr. James M. Yelle Mr. Thomas J. Yelle Estates and Trust Estate of Robert William McNamara

Organizations The Southdown InstituteSociety of St. Vincent DePaulImmaculate Conception

ChurchImmaculate Heart Convent Sisters of IHM Notre Dame Preparatory

School Sisters of Christian Charity

Associates Gesu School Inc. Jesuit Community, Wheeling Jesuit University

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16 | Autumn 2009

The JesuiT Legacy socieTy was created to honor those who remember the Maryland Province in their estate plans. This list includes persons who have made a Legacy Gift by remembering the Maryland Province in their estate plans. Thank you for such lasting gifts.

Ms. Arlene Fedorchak and Mr. Niles OverlyMr. & Mrs. John H. FeeleyMr. & Mrs. John FeldmannMr. & Mrs. William J. FergusonMrs. Claudia R. FieldingMr. & Mrs. C. B. FiliaciMr. John J. FinanMr. & Mrs. Stewart S. FinklerMr. & Mrs. Stanley FioreMr. Thomas G. FishMr. & Mrs. John E. FishMr. & Mrs. Thomas P.

FitzpatrickMr. & Mrs. Gerald F. Flood, Jr.Mr. Joseph M. FlynnMr. Norman F. ForanMr. & Mrs. Richard L. ForresterMr. Joseph A. FoxMs. Catherine T. FoyMr. Andrew J. FrankleMr. Melvyn FreidMr. & Mrs. John A. FritzgesMr. John P. FrommMr. Glen GallMr. & Mrs. William O. GallagherMr. & Mrs. John GallantMr. Robert GallantMr. & Mrs. William P. GanleyMr. Edward C. GannonMr. & Mrs. Francis J. Gaul, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. GausMrs. Virginia GawthropMrs. Jean K. GendronMr. & Mrs. Christopher S.

GeorgeMr. Daniel J. GerberMs. Clara M. GerberMs. Marguerite E. GerlachMrs. Sarah R. GilmoreMr. & Mrs. James F. GilroyMr. & Mrs. Timothy M. GisrielMr. & Mrs. William L.

GladstoneMr. & Mrs. Michael P. GoingMs. Indra GongbaMr. & Mrs. Gregory GontarykMr. & Mrs. Andrew V. GraingerMrs. Helen C. GriffinDr. & Mrs. Kent I. GroffMs. Ann Z. GrumpeltDr. & Mrs. Gerald A. GryczkoMr. & Mrs. Michael J. GuastellaMrs. & Mrs. Doris GuercioMrs. Helen M. GugertyMs. Louise T. GundersonMr. & Mrs. Dennis J. HaleyMr. & Mrs. John K. HaleyMr. Edward Paul HaleyMr. & Mrs. John R. Hallden, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Randolph G. Harmon

Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Hartman

Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. HealeyMr. & Mrs. William F. Hellen, Jr.Mr. Charles A. HendersonMr. & Mrs. Chris HendricksonMr. & Mrs. Robert E. Henley, Jr.Mrs. Mary K. HennessyMr. Charles E. HerbstMr. & Mrs. William J. HillMr. & Mrs. James T. HoffmanBr. John B. Hollywood, SJMr. & Mrs. Joe HoultonMrs. Ann Marie HrickoMs. Susan B. HumphreyMr. & Mrs. Larry HurdMs. Patricia M. IsaacsMs. Keli IsaacsonMs. Charmaine Mueller IversenMr. John J. JagodzinskiMrs. Anne K. Jeffrey Mrs. Sally B. JenkinsMr. Lawrence H. JonesMr. Stephen G. KaiserMr. & Mrs. Richard R. KaluzaMrs. Kerry Aline KearneyDr. & Mrs. Francis X. KeeleyMrs. Glenna L. KeeneMrs. Anna R. KellyMr. & Mrs. Paul W. KellyMr. & Mrs. Joseph C. KellyDr. Marita D. KennaMs. Jane F. KennedyMr. & Mrs. Joseph H. KenneyMrs. Patricia M. KennyDr. & Mrs. G. Richard KernMr. & Mrs. Eric KertzMiss Ellen Lee KielMrs. Antoinette M. KingMs. Lorraine M. KnightMrs. Mary Barbara KoglerMr. Peter P. KolissMs. Josephine KosiakMr. Arthur KresseSr. Doris Kresslein, SSNDMrs. Karole J. KreutterMr. & Mrs. J. Philip KueblerMrs. Mary E. KupinskiMr. & Mrs. Raymond LabadieMr. & Mrs. John J. LaceyMr. & Mrs. Scott LammieMr. & Mrs. C. H. LanziMr. & Mrs. John M. LeachMs. Jane M. LelbyDr. Fred C. LeoneMr. & Mrs. Robert C. LesuerMr. Alan B. LevineMs. Nancy E. LindsayMr. & Mrs. John A. LippertMrs. Marguerite LoboMr. Francis X. Locke

Estate of Antoinette K. NeeEstate of Anna T.L. BenvegarEstate of Bernice R. DevlinJohn Maurice & Alice M.

Dunne TrustEstate of Francis X. Quinn Estate of Robert L. Carroll Estate of Emily Burbach Estate of William E. Kidd, Jr.Samuel U. Schultz Trust Estate of Louis E. Leilich Mrs. Marian Affiliani Mr. James A. Barrow, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Bartel,

Jr.Dr. Frank R. Bellomo Mr. & Mrs. Charles K.

BrewsterMr. & Mrs. Paul E. Burke, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John P. Butler, IIIMr. & Mrs. R. D. Byrnes Mr. Robert F. Carroll Mrs. Frances F. Clancy Mrs. Martha M. Colleran Mrs. Winifred L. Coughlin Mr. & Mrs. Francesco

CrocenziMrs. Joseph P. Devine Dr. & Mrs. James J. DiamondMrs. Josephine S. DowbenkoMs. Ruth Doyle Mrs. Phyllis M. Drake Mr. Gregory DuFour Ms. Mary A. Eisel Ms. Joyce F. Eng Mr. Chuck Fair Mrs. Regina Fatz Col. & Mrs. Lawrence E.

ForkhamerMr. & Mrs. John T. Galvin, IIIMr. John W. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. John J. Gavin Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hacala Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Hamm Mr. & Mrs. Gregory A.

HellerMr. & Mrs. James F. HigginsMrs. Katherine Ann Hoffar Mrs. Jean S. Horak Mr. John Jablonski Mr. Robert J. Kichline Mrs. Kathryn Knott

Ms. Emily M. Kohler Mr. Charles Lambur Ms. Sally LaSala Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Light Mr. John Earl Lucas Mrs. Pearl M. Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Paul Magree Ms. Marianne Marlo Dr. Judith G. Massicot-FisherMr. & Mrs. Peter J. McCord Mr. David McGauley Mr. & Mrs. Thomas V.

McGuinnessMrs. Margaret B. McKinneyMrs. Anthony D. Molinaro Ms. Jeanne M. Mott Mrs. Regina S. Mulcahy Mrs. C. Terry Murray Mr. Lou Niznik Mrs. Helen T. Norman Ms. Katherine Nugent Mr. Martin J. O’Brien Ms. Maureen O’Brien Mr. Christopher T. O’KeefeMr. Anthony Pamelia Mrs. Harry Pfister Mr. Frederick Pontuti Mrs. Pauline L. Price Mrs. Joan Quick Dr. & Mrs. Charles R. ReedMs. Wendella M. Ricker Mrs. Concetta Rogers Ms. Dorothy Rue Mrs. Inez F. Ryan Mr. & Mrs. William H.

ScharrMs. M. V. Seaton Mrs. Patricia J. Steidle Mr. & Mrs. David J.

SteinbacherMr. Thomas E. R. Stribling Mr. & Mrs. John J. Sweeney,

Jr.Mrs. Marie-Claude Terrot Mrs. Charles Troop Mrs. Mary E. Unterkoefler Mr. & Mrs. Gino Valenti Mrs. Anne M. Walsh Ms. Margaret D. Walter Ms. Carolyn Wile Dr. & Mrs. Christopher M.

Wilson

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honor roll of donors 2009Mr. & Mrs. Francis B. LorsonMs. Catherine E. LoveMs. Kathleen T. LoveMrs. Anne R. LoyMr. & Mrs. James P. LutzMr. Robert H. Mace, Jr.Ms. Charlotte M. MahoneyMs. Anne E. MahoneyDr. & Mrs. Courtney M.

MalcarneyMr. & Mrs. Amando M. MalvarMr. & Mrs. Charles L. Mason, Sr.Dr. Judith G. Massicot-FisherMr. & Mrs. Melvyn T. MasudaMs. Alice McAndrewMr. & Mrs. Donald F. McCaigMr. & Mrs. Edward S.

McCauleyMr. & Mrs. Patrick J. McCormickDr. & Mrs. W. Scott McDougalMr. & Mrs. John P. McGeeMrs. Mary C. McGeeMr. John W. McGrannMr. & Mrs. Thomas V.

McGuinnessDeacon & Mrs. Arthur M.

McGuireMr. & Mrs. Thomas F.

McHugh, Sr.Mrs. Jean McKernanDr. & Mrs. Mark P. McKinleyMr. & Mrs. John S. McManus,

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John J. McPhaul, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. MeagherMr. Christopher J. MelnickMr. Samuel J. MerlinoMr. & Mrs. Joseph W. MilaniMr. Glenn MillerMr. & Mrs. Matthew MillerMr. & Mrs. Edward J. MillerMr. & Mrs. Brian G. MillerMs. Annmarie D. MitchellMr. & Mrs. Joseph MitchellMr. Patrick J. Monaghan, IIIMr. & Mrs. Frank J. MonahanMr. Joseph Montville†Mr. Stephen G. S. MoxleyMs. Dianne M. MrukMr. John L. MuellerMr. & Mrs. Ernest A. MunnsMr. & Mrs. James B. MurphyMr. & Mrs. Joseph A. MurphyMr. & Mrs. Robert Leo MurphyMs. Sharon MussomeliMr. & Mrs. George F. NagyMr. & Mrs. William J. NaumanMr. J. Kevin O NeillMr. & Mrs. George NemphosMr. & Mrs. Richard E. NesfederMrs. Robert E. Nolan, Jr.

Mrs. Dolores M. NolanMr. & Mrs. Carl NorbyMr. & Mrs. Victor B. NoscheseMr. Fred J. Novak, DDSMrs. Helen M. NugentMr. & Mrs. John K. O’BrienDr. & Mrs. Arthur S. O’BrienRev. Kevin F. O’Brien, SJMr. & Mrs. Martin M.

O’ConnorMr. & Mrs. James J. O’DonnellMrs. Mary C. O’HaraMrs. Carol T. O’HaraMs. Elizabeth OnofreyMrs. Ruth L. OpeilMrs. Eleanor M. O’RourkeMs. Regina M. O’RourkeMr. & Mrs. Nicholas OssmanDr. & Mrs. Rudolph A. OswaldMr. & Mrs. Walter A. PackardMr. & Mrs. C. William PacyMr. Bob W. ParkerMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey J. PeconMr. & Mrs. Frank G. PellegrinoMr. & Mrs. Jaime PereiraMr. & Mrs. Maurice A. PeterMr. & Mrs. Sean M. PetriskoMr. & Mrs. Joseph PettitMr. Richard PiacentiniMrs. Patricia G. PierretMs. Cynthia Pisinski and

Mr. John LackoMr. & Mrs. W. R. PittengerDr. & Mrs. Michael F. PlottMr. Edward P. PrendergastMr. & Mrs. Richard H. PriceDr. & Mrs. Eugene R.

PrincipatoMr. Thomas E. QuigleyMr. & Mrs. Seth A. QuillinMr. & Mrs. John J. QuinnMrs. Pamela M. QuinnMr. & Mrs. Thomas F. X. Rafferty, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Ernest RamirezMrs. Marie S. RamirezDr. & Mrs. Charles R. ReedMr. & Mrs. Louis A.

Reinhardt, Jr.Mr. Raymond C. ReinmannMr. Martin Stephen RendonMr. & Mrs. David ReynoldsMrs. Florence RicciMr. William J RicciMs. Wendella M. RickerMs. Patricia A. RigbyMr. & Mrs. James E. P. RingMs. Elizabeth A. RiordanMs. Dorothy J. RitterMr. & Mrs. William RobertsMr. John J. Robinson

Mr. & Mrs. Samuel P. RoccoMr. & Mrs. Joseph F. RocheDr. & Mrs. John L. RocheDr. Rita M. RodriguezMr. & Mrs. John J. RoganMr. & Mrs. David W. RohlandMr. & Mrs. Richard RohrerMr. Joseph V. Roller, IIMrs. Theresa C. RoneyMs. Teresa R. RothMr. & Mrs. Joseph RuggieriMr. & Mrs. John A. RyanMr. & Mrs. Donald W. RyanMrs. Sara M. SantilliMr. & Mrs. Nicholas B. ScheetzDr. & Mrs. Charles A. SchlegelMr. & Mrs. Gabriel SchmergelMr. & Mrs. Gabriel SchranzMrs. Mary R. SchuMr. Harry A. SchultMr. & Mrs. Carl Joseph ScichiliCol. & Mrs. George A. SeamandsMr. & Mrs. Tarun K. SenMr. William J. SenaMr. Michael A. ShieldsMrs. Ann P. ShineMr. & Mrs. Alfonso E. SierraMr. & Mrs. George T. SimmonsMr. Joseph L. SimonMr. Wilbert H. SirotaMr. & Mrs. Edward SkopalMr. & Mrs. Roger L. Slakey, Jr.Mrs. Cornelia M. SmithMs. Mary Julia SmithMrs. Patricia K. SmythMr. & Mrs. Robert J. SocciMrs. Frances L. SpencerMr. & Mrs. Michael J. StaffordMs. Dolores StankiewiczMr. & Mrs. Thomas G. StensonMr. James StergiosMr. & Mrs. Henry P StonelakeMr. & Mrs. James L. StopperMr. & Mrs. Jack StullMs. Rosemary D. SullivanMr. & Mrs. Andrew SullivanMr. & Mrs. Frank J. SwetzMr. & Mrs. Frank Tam, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. TaneyhillMr. & Mrs. Robert H. TemkinMr. & Mrs. Carl A. Teschemacher, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. A. John TightRev. Raymond F. TribuianiMr. & Mrs. Richard A.

TschidererMr. & Mrs. John TuranoMr. & Mrs. William G. Uptegraph, Jr.

Dr. & Mrs. Donald W. Urbancic

Ms. Mary Jane VaethMs. Patricia H. VandersliceMr. & Mrs. Adam L. VerchinskiMr. & Mrs. Philip L.

Verduce, IIMr. & Mrs. F. R. VerrierMr. Francis C. VincentMs. Kelly A. WalshMr. & Mrs. Joseph J. WardMs. Nancy C. WestMr. & Mrs. James R. WetzelMrs. Frances WetzelMr. & Mrs. James J.

Whelan, IIIMr. & Mrs. Thomas A. WhippleMs. Eleanor D. WillardDr. & Mrs. Christopher M.

WilsonMr. Charles J. Wolf, IIMrs. Mary C. WoodMr. John WoyniczMrs. Dolores YacapsinMr. & Mrs. Paul W. YarrishMr. & Mrs. C. M. ZacharskiMr. & Mrs. Bruce ZaepfelMr. Jason M. Zazyczny

Estates and TrustEstate of Robert William

McNamara

OrganizationsSt. John’s Preparatory School,

Inc., Danvers, MAThe Immigrant Learning

Center, Inc., Malden, MASisters of IHM, Somerville, NJSaints Simon and Jude Church,

West Chester, PAChurch Of The Immaculate

Conception, Towson, MDMitchell-Wiedefeld Funeral

Home, Inc., Baltimore, MDSuzanne Rindfleisch, DO and

Associates, PA, Arnold, MDPhipps Conservatory and

Botanical Gardens, Pittsburgh, PA

Sisters of the Sacred Heart Honolulu, HI

St. Rita Bread Ministry, Dallas, TX

Upscale Resale Furnishings, LLC, Gahanna, OH

Boston College/ Heffernan House, Chestnut Hill, MA

AssociatesSt. Joseph’s Preparatory School,

Philadelphia, PA

Page 20: Ignatian Imprints Autumn 2009

Would you like to forma closer relationship with God?

Evenings at Loyola Retreat House begin with a glorious sunset over the Potomac River.

Loyola Retreat House in Southern Maryland offers a variety of retreats for those seeking a more intimaterelationship with their God.

Set on a bluff overlooking the Potomac River on 235 acres of woodland in Southern Maryland, Loyola offers theme-based conferences, days of prayer, specialized retreats and hosts seminars, meetings and workshops for other organizations. The center has 72 guest rooms and a youth center for teen retreats.

Plan now! In Summer 2010, a 30-day retreat based on St. Ignatius’ own Spiritual Exercises will be offered for the first time at Loyola Retreat House.

For more information on any of Loyola’s programs, call Loyola Retreat House at 301-392-0801 or go to www.loyolaretreat.org

Loyola Retreat House 9270 Loyola Retreat Road | Faulkner, Maryland 20632 301-392-0801 | [email protected]