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June 14-28, 2004



New DVD Available

The 2004 Scottish Rite Leadership Conferences began with a six-minute video production which was so successful that it is now available as a DVD for general use. Titled “An Introduction to the Scottish Rite, Southern Jurisdiction,” the DVD traces the development of Freemasonry and our Order from eighteenth-century England to present-day America. The short program makes a dynamic presentation at any Masonic meeting and is available for $10 (plus shipping & handling). Send checks payable to The Supreme Council to: The Supreme Council, 1733 16th St., NW, Washington, DC, or order through the Online Store at www.srmason.sj.org.

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Governor of Alabama Declares
Scottish Rite Week

On March 24, 2004, in a ceremony marking the 130th anniversary of the Montgomery, Alabama, Lodge of Perfection (constituted by Grand Commander Albert Pike on April 13, 1874), the Honorable Bob Riley, Governor of Alabama, issued a Proclamation declaring the week of April 13, 2004, “Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Week.” In the Proclamation, Governor Riley noted that “the Montgomery Lodge of Perfection has quietly, lawfully, successfully and continuously toiled with its work in accordance with the blessings of the Great Architect of the Universe to improve the lot of all Humanity for One Hundred and Thirty Years.” Congratulations, Brethren of Montgomery, for receiving this public recognition of Scottish Rite Freemasonry’s good work for over a century in Alabama.

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Scottish Rite Brother Composes
Civil War Symphony

On March 1, 2003, Bro. Todd W. Goodman, 32°, Valley of Omaha, Nebraska, was honored to participate in the world premier of his Symphony No. 1, Fields of Crimson, a musical reflection on the Civil War battle of Gettysburg, performed by the Altoona, Pennsylvania, Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Nicholas Palmer.
Fields of Crimson evokes the battle of Gettysburg through music and a narrative written as diary entries from the perspective of an adolescent girl living in the town of Gettysburg in 1863. The work’s five movements take the listener through pre-battle preparations, the three days of battle, and a heartwarming elegy.
Bro. Goodman writes: “When I was a boy growing up in central Pennsylvania, the Civil War was an omnipresent theme. The older I got, the more I realized how integral these few years of history were to the molding of the foundation of America. When I visited these battlefields, the impression left on my mind was one of humble and noble awe. Lives were lost for freedom; freedom from tyranny, freedom of rights, and freedom for life. Symphony No. 1 Fields of Crimson is my rendition of this story, my realization and understanding of the necessary horrible evil of war, and my memorial to this great battle.”
Brother Goodman, age 26, is a member of Bedford Lodge #320, Bedford, Pennsylvania, where his father, Richard Goodman is currently Worshipful Master, and his brother, Air Force Major Richard Goodman II, is also a member. Brother Goodman now lives in Broomfield, Colorado, and is an active member of the El Jebel Shrine “True Blue” big band.
For more information on the CD Fields of Crimson, contact Wrong Note Media online at www.WrongNoteMedia.com, call 720-890-0380, or e-mail Brother Goodman at ToddGoodman@WrongNoteMedia.com.

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Centennial Celebrated in Tokyo
Masonic Center

Sinim Lodge was founded December 2, 1903, in Shanghai, China, under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts. However, when the “Gang of Four” closed down all Lodges in China during the 1950s, the Lodge relocated to Tokyo, where it flourishes today. On December 3, 2003, as part of a celebration of the Lodge’s Centennial, an enthusiastic audience of Brethren and guests nearly filled the Tokyo Masonic Center’s beautiful Scottish Rite Hall to hear Bro. Robert H. Ryker, 32°, Valley of Tokyo (left above), conduct a special performance of Bro. Mozart’s famous Masonic opera, The Magic Flute. Above right, three talented singers, fulfilling roles as attendants to the Queen of the Night, are pictured performing one of the opera’s brilliant trios. Ill. Joe A. Diele, GC, Deputy in Japan and Korea, joined many Scottish Rite Brethren in giving the performance a well-deserved standing ovation.

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Deputy Kerr Receives Outstanding Award

On the evening of January 10, 2004, Ill. Arthur J. Kerr, Deputy of the Supreme Council, 33°, S.J., at the Panama Canal, representing SGC Ronald A. Seale, 33°, attended the installation of MW Enrique Lau Cortes (left in photo) as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Panama. Immediately after the installation, a reception was held at the City Club in Panama City, Panama, and in the presence of about 300 Masons and guests, the new Grand Master presented Deputy Kerr with the Grand Master’s Medal in recognition of Ill. Kerr’s continued support, wise counsel, and exceptional Masonic service to the Grand Lodge of Panama.

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AFJROTC Award in Mississippi

Recently, Cadet Lt. Col. James Robinson received the Scottish Rite’s JROTC Education and Americanism Award. Cadet Robinson is a student at the South Panola High School, Batesville, Mississippi. The popular award consists of a certificate suitable for framing, a medal engraved with the Scottish Rite’s double-headed eagle and the words "JROTC [or ROTC] Education and Americanism," and a ribbon which, like the medal, can be worn on the ROTC uniform. The Scottish Rite, S.J., also offers a ROTC award for college and university students. In a letter dated April 26, 2004, to the Supreme Council, Colonel Orville G. Robertson, USAF (Ret.), Senior Aerospace Science Instructor, noted that Cadet Robinson is “a super young man who will represent your organization in an outstanding way. He is our Cadet Wing Chaplain and plans to go into the ministry upon the completion of his studies.” The award was presented to Cadet Robinson (photo above) by Bro. Billy W. Shankle, 32°, member of the Valley of Clarksdale, Mississippi. For information on the JROTC or ROTC programs sponsored by the Southern Jurisdiction, please contact your Valley Secretary. Inquiries from the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite should be addressed to the Grand Executive Director’s office by calling 202-232-3579, ext. 121.

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Austin Learning Center Sponsors Lecture at University of Texas

Principal participants in the recent dyslexia lecture presented by the Scottish Rite Learning Center of Austin at the University of Texas, Austin, were (l. to r.): Dr. Jeffrey L. Black, 32°, Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children in Dallas; Dr. Bennett Shaywitz and Dr. Sally Shaywitz; Ill. Jack E. Hightower, SGIG in Texas; and Ill. William B. Hilgers, President, Scottish Rite Learning Center of Austin.                    Photo: Ill. James G. Dougherty, Valley of Austin, Tex.

On March 1, 2004, the Scottish Rite Learning Center of Austin, Texas, a RiteCare Childhood Language Program facility, sponsored a dyslexia lecture by the renowned researchers Drs. Sally and Bennett Shaywitz from the Yale Center for the Study of Learning and Attention. The event, which was co-sponsored by the University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts, Department of Psychology, drew a standing-room-only audience in the Lyndon B. Johnson Library and garnered wide positive attention of the Scottish Rite’s main philanthropy by the University of Texas community, Austin’s newspapers, all three local TV stations, Time-Warner Cable News 8, and the Associated Press. It was a special pleasure for Inspector Hightower and his wife, Colleen, to welcome Mr. Dick Rathgeber to the event. Mr. Rathgeber recently donated a substantial piece of real estate to the Scottish Rite Learning Center of Austin for a new Scottish Rite Learning Center campus

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SGC Seale Honored by Society for International Scholars

During the opening exercises on March 25, 2004, of the 18th International Conference of Phi Beta Delta, held in the Temple Room of the House of the Temple, several distinguished persons received Honorary Life Memberships in Phi Beta Delta in recognition of their contributions to international relations and scholarship. Pictured above (front row, l. to r.) are Mr. Michael S. Swetman, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Potomac Institute of Policy Study; Dr. John W. Boettjer, GC, Managing Editor, Scottish Rite Journal, receiving the award for SGC Ronald A. Seale who could not be present; Dr. Paul Rich, 32°, International President, Phi Beta Delta; Dr. William D. Evans, Honorary Advocate General, Phi Beta Delta; Dr. David Kay, Senior Fellow, Potomac Institute for Policy Studies and formerly United Nations Chief Nuclear Weapons Inspector; Dr. Frank Plantan, Professor of International Relations, University of Pennsylvania, and Executive Director of Sigma Iota Rho; (second row, l. to r.) Professor Jack A. Siggins, University Librarian, The George Washington University Library; Dr. Fritz Korth, Legal Advisor, University of the Americas; and Dr. Leo Ribuffo, Society of the Cincinnati Distinguished Professor of History, The George Washington University, and International Historian, Phi Beta Delta, who delivered the Keynote Address for the occasion.


On March 25, 2004, in recognition of his services to international Freemasonry, Sovereign Grand Commander Ronald A. Seale, 33°, received Honorary Life Membership in the Gamma Sigma Chapter of Phi Beta Delta, an honor society for international scholars. Grand Commander Seale’s induction took place during the society’s 18th International Conference, which was held in the Temple Room of the House of the Temple. The society’s International President, who conducted the ceremony, is Brother Paul Rich, 32°, Valley of Boston, Massachusetts. Bro. Rich is Titular Professor of International Relations and History, University of the Americas-Puebla, Mexico; a Fellow of the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, San Francisco; and a noted Masonic scholar published in the Scottish Rite Journal, the Plumbline, and Heredom. With some coming from as far away as Colombia and Mexico, 21 outstanding college students or professors were formally inducted into the society. After the ceremony, about 60 guests attended a reception with refreshments in the Atrium or enjoyed a short tour of the House of the Temple. All participants were given a packet of materials relevant to Freemasonry, and several expressed their pleasure at both visiting the national headquarters of the Scottish Rite and learning more about Freemasonry.

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Special Degree Cast at Guthrie, Oklahoma, Spring Reunion

Photo: A. Clayton Comer, 33°

The Candidates at the Spring 2004 Reunion at the Guthrie, Oklahoma, Scottish Rite Temple had an unexpected treat. For various reasons, four cast members of the 19th Degree were unable to perform. The tradition at the Guthrie Valley is that if an actor is not present, a reader speaks his lines from a reading stand in the balcony while a member of the Supernumerary Club walks the part on the stage. But almost all the Director of Work’s readers were getting costumed for the 20th Degree. So, unknown to the Candidates until afterwards, Sovereign Grand Commander Ronald A. Seale, 33°, and three other distinguished Oklahoma Brethren read parts from the 19°. They are pictured above (left to right): Ill. Joe R. Manning, Jr., 33°, Personal Representative in Guthrie of the SGIG; Ill. Joseph C. Jennings, Jr., 33°. SGIG in Oklahoma; Grand Commander Seale, honored guest at the Reunion; and Ill. Robert G. Davis, 33°, General Secretary, Valley of Guthrie. Surely such a distinguished cast has never before performed in the Guthrie Scottish Rite Temple.

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