From June 4 through June 6, 2004, Grand Commander
Ronald A. Seale, 33°, hosted the Tenth Conference of English-Speaking
Supreme Councils (group photo above) at the Southern Jurisdiction’s
headquarters in Washington, D.C., and the Capital Hilton Hotel.
The executive officers of twelve Supreme Councils or Grand Lodges
participated. Included among these were Ill. Walter E. Webber,
33°, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction (NMJ), U.S.A., along with
Ill. Gardner Cy Sconyers, 33°, Deputy for Rhode Island, NMJ.
Representatives from the Southern Jurisdiction were Illustrious
Brothers John E. Moyers, Grand Secretary General; William R.
Miller, Grand Sword Bearer; and William G. Sizemore, GC, Grand
Executive Director. Other delegates, many attending with their
wives, were from Australia, Canada, Denmark, England & Wales,
Finland, Iceland, Ireland, The Netherlands, Scotland, and Sweden.
Social occasions included a reception and black-tie dinner at
the House of the Temple, sightseeing in Washington, D.C., and
a luncheon cruise on the Potomac River.
Among several topics at the conference were Masonry’s
changing public image, Masonic developments in the Eastern Block
nations
of Europe, and “The Masonic Toolkit” used by the
Supreme Council for The Netherlands. The next conference of English-Speaking
Supreme Councils will be hosted by Finland in 2008.
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Plumbline Added
to “Brother
to Brother,
A Masonic Reading Program”
There are many reasons why a Brother cannot read!
He may be visually impaired because of macular degeneration,
glaucoma, or perhaps he was seriously injured in an accident.
He may have a learning disability like dyslexia or be suffering
from the infirmities of old age.
A sense of isolation or helplessness is created
when a Brother is no longer able to read, as printed materials
are often the
best, most comprehensive, and available method of securing
in-depth information. If he is unable to read, then who will
read to him?
The Brethren of the Valley of Dallas, Texas, have
partnered with Reading and Radio Resource and Ill. Thomas R.
Hall, 33¾,
to bring
the Scottish Rite Journal and now the Plumbline, the quarterly
newsletter of the Scottish Rite Research Society, to Brothers
who are reading impaired. Reading and Radio Resource is a volunteer,
501(c)3 non-profit corporation dedicated to providing alternatives
for the reading disabled since 1969.
The partnership between the Valley of Dallas and
Reading and Radio Resource is an ideal venture. The Valley of
Dallas will
provide the enthusiastic volunteers, who are Scottish Rite
Freemasons, to do the reading.
Help is needed from everyone who reads the Scottish
Rite Journal or the Plumbline. It will be your
job to find the Brethren
who need this type of help and to notify either the Secretary
of
your local Scottish Rite Valley or contact Fred E. Allen, 33¾
(photo above), at the address below. Our visually impaired
Brothers cannot read this article; they are depending on you.
Can your
help
a Brother
in need? Your help will be a great service to them and to Masonry.
Probably, each of us knows Brothers who need this assistance.
Please contact them and, if necessary, help them fill out the
required form and return it to us so that we can render this
wonderful service. Remember, this service is FREE, but we need
the filled-in application form. This form is available on the
Supreme Council’s Web site (www.srmason-sj.org).
Click on the NEWS link, the
July 12- July 25 segment, to download a printable form which
you can fill out and mail to: Fred E.
Allen
500 South Harwood, Dallas, Texas 75201. Or request this form
by writing to the same address or contact Ill. Allen by e-mail
at fredallen2726@cox-internet-com.
Submitted by Fred E. Allen, 33¾,
Personal Representative,
Valley of Dallas, Texas
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47th European Conference of Supreme Councils

Unique gavel presentation to the
Supreme Council for France
Photo: Michael E. Noonan,
The Scottish Rite Journal

|
Ill. Bros. Henri Baranger, 33°,
SGC, Supreme Council for France, and Ronald A. Seale,
SGC, Southern Jurisdiction, U.S.A., reaffirmed their
fraternal ties at the 47th European Conference of
Sovereign Grand Commanders. Above, SGC Seale (right)
wears a special medal, presented to him by Ill. Baranger,
recognizing SGC Seale as a Member of Honour of the
Supreme Council for France.
|
Sovereign Grand Commander Ronald A. Seale, 33°,
with his wife, Saundra, and Sovereign Grand Commander Walter
E. Webber, 33°, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, with his wife,
Leslie, were pleased to participate in the 47th Conference of
Sovereign Grand Commanders of Europe and Associated Countries
meeting in Paris, France, May 16-23, 2004.
The delegates to the conference, most accompanied
by their wives, from the Southern Jurisdiction were Ill. Bros.
Seale, SGC; Curtis
N. Lancaster, Lt. SGC; Robert L. Goldsmith, Grand Minister
of State; Robert W. Woodward, GC, Deputy, Orient of American
Military
NATO Bases; and William G. Sizemore, GC, Grand Executive Director
of the Supreme Council.
Aside from the many general sessions, during which
issues of mutual interest were discussed, and several delightful
social
occasions, a highlight of the conference was the commemoration
of the Bicentennial Anniversary of the Supreme Council for
France, 33°, 1804-2004. To recognize this historic
occasion, SGC Seale presented Sovereign Grand Commander
Henri Baranger, 33°,
Supreme Council for France, the host of the conference, with
a unique gift (pictured on the previous page). It consists
of a gavel made of wood from Shepheard’s Tavern,
Charleston, S.C., birthplace of the Mother Supreme Council,
May 31, 1801.
The custom-made gavel, enclosed in a Plexiglas® box,
is complemented by a sounding block made of granite from
a foundation
wall of
the House of the Temple in Washington, D.C., and a wood base
made from an oak staircase being renovated at the House of
the Temple. Finally, this very special gift has two inscribed
brass
dedication plaques.

The 47th Conference of the Sovereign Grand Commanders
of Europe and
Associated Countries met in Paris, France, May 16-23, 2004.
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Alexander
G. Spanos, 33°, Receives Grand
Cross of Honour
In a brief and elegant special ceremony on April
5, 2004, in the corporate office of the A. G. Spanos Companies
headquartered in Stockton, California, H. Douglas Lemons, 33°,
SGIG in California (right in photo), presented
Alexander G. Spanos, 33° (left), with his Grand Cross of
Honour cap and patent. Ill. Spanos was elected to receive this
highest honor of the Southern Jurisdiction at the 2003 Biennial
Session; however, due to his busy schedule, he was unable to
be at the gala dinner honoring newly elected Grand Crosses on
October 7, 2003, at the Capital Hilton Hotel. Actually, Ill.
Spanos and his wife, Faye, were in Washington, D.C., that evening,
but, before being aware of his election to the Grand Cross Court
of Honour, Ill. Spanos and his wife had accepted an invitation
for that same evening to dine with President and Mrs. Bush.
Preferring a simple ceremony, Ill. Spanos welcomed
only some 39 family members and very close friends to witness
Inspector
Lemons present him with the Grand Cross cap and certificate.
Ill. Spanos is the only member of the Stockton Valley ever
to receive this recognition. Among those present were the Mayor
and Mayor-elect of the City of Stockton, the Chairman of the
San Joaquin County Board of Supervisors, California State Assemblyman
Greg Aghazarian, and Representatives of United States Congressman
Richard Pombo, all of whom presented special certificates of
recognition to Brother Spanos on this historic occasion. In addition,
Ill. Spanos received congratulatory letters from the Governor
of California and from President Bush who wrote “I applaud
your compassion and generosity in assisting others at home and
around the world.” President Bush added a handwritten postscript
saying “Thanks for all you do!”
All members of the Scottish Rite and, in particular,
the Brethren of the Valley of Stockton offer Ill. Spanos, Grand
Cross, our
sincere congratulations.
Submitted by W. Ronald
Coale, 33°,
Former Personal Representative, Valley of Stockton, Calif.
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“Greatest
Generation” Banner
Welcomes Visitors
to Special Americanism Displays

Photo: Elizabeth A. Williams, The Scottish Rite
Journal
From Memorial Day through Labor Day 2004, a large
color banner (12’ x 42”) welcomed Brethren
and the general public to visit special patriotic displays in
the House of the Temple in our nation’s capital. The banner’s
text read “Freemasons of the Greatest Generation, Americanism
Museum Tours.” Aside from viewing the new Americanism Museum
dedicated in 2003, visitors were invited to tour the Southern
Jurisdiction’s headquarters building, in particular the
Scottish Rite Hall of Honor and other display areas where portraits
of Brethren who served during World War II were decorated with
red-white-and-blue ribbons. The banner and its related displays
are typical of Scottish Rite’s outreach to the general
public both by the Supreme Council in Washington, D.C., and by
Valleys throughout the Southern Jurisdiction.
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Lonnie
A. “Bo” Pilgrim,
33°,
Portrait Received
into Dallas Hall of Honor
The portrait at right has been placed in the
Scottish Rite Hall of Honor, Dallas, Texas, to honor Lonnie Alfred “Bo” Pilgrim,
33°, an outstanding individual in Industry, Community, Church,
and Masonic Leadership.
From a single Pittsburg, Texas, feed store in
1946, his company, Pilgrim’s Pride, has become the second-largest poultry
company in both America and Mexico as well as the largest in
Puerto Rico. Today, Pilgrim’s Pride employs 40,000 people,
processes about 2.5 billion pounds of chicken, 300 million pounds
of turkey, and 3 billion table eggs each year. Ill. Pilgrim,
the company’s Chairman, a major stockholder, and cofounder
with
his brother, operates by placing his religious principles first.
Currently he teaches Sunday school in the Baptist Church of Pittsburg,
Texas. “I’m a trustee of the Lord,” Brother
Pilgrim says. “The Lord owns everything on this Earth.
When I give, I am giving what belongs to Him.”
Accolades and honors paying tribute to Brother
Pilgrim reflect his contribution as an entrepreneur and agriculturist.
Among
them are: 1995 Dallas Baptist University Russell H. Perry Enterprise
Award; 1997 Man of the Year in Texas Agri-culture by the Texas
County Agriculture Agents Association; and 1999 Texas A&M
Distin-guished Texans in Agriculture. He has served on the
Dallas Baptist University Board and received an Honorary Doctor
of Humanities
Degree from that university.
In 1991, the Grand Lodge of Texas honored Brother “Bo” with
the “Sam Houston Medal,” a very high honor presented
in the past to Walter Cronkite, Burl Ives, and Bob Crosby. In
the 164-year history of the Grand Lodge of Texas, less than 30
of the Medals have been presented. Ill. Pilgrim received the
33° on November 15, 2003, in the Valley of Dallas.
Clearly, “Bo” Pilgrim is a dedicated family man,
Mason, and Churchman. The great ideals taught by these entities
are his guiding lights, and he truly lives up to the integrity
to which all good men and Masons aspire.
Note: The above is extracted from a much longer
tribute to Ill. Pilgrim which appeared originally in the May
2004 Scottish Rite
News for the Valley of Dallas (www.dallasscottishrite.org).
The original text may be viewed in the “Internet
Articles” (Sep.-Oct.
2004) segment of the Supreme Council’s Web site: www.srmason-sj.org.
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New Historical DVD Available from the Supreme
Council
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). Please
send checks payable to The Supreme Council to: The Supreme Council,
1733 16th St., NW, Washington, DC, 20009-3103, order through
the Online Store at www.srmason.sj.org, or call 202-777-3136
between the hours of 8 am and 3 pm, EST, Monday through Friday.
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Gregory L.
Kimberling, 32°, Elected
Grand Master of DeMolay International during International Supreme
Council Session
On June 19, 2004, in Denver,
Colorado, upon his election as Grand Master of DeMolay International,
Bro. Gregory
L. Kimberling, 32° (center), received the hearty congratulations
of Sovereign Grand Commanders Ill. Walter E. Webber, Northern
Masonic Jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite (left in photo) and
Ill. Ronald A. Seale, Southern Jurisdiction (right).
Bro. Gregory L. Kimberling, 32°, Valley of
Lewiston, Idaho, was elected the 73rd Grand Master of DeMolay
International on June 19, 2004, at DeMolay’s International
Supreme Council Session in Denver, Colorado. He joined DeMolay,
E-Dah-Ho Chapter, in Moscow, Idaho, in November of 1971, later
serving as State Master Councilor, the highest position a youth
can hold at the state level. On the International level, he has
served as Chairman of the Budget & Finance and Convention
Planning Committees, Chaired the Executive Officer’s Conference,
and served on the Investments Committee for DeMolay. He served
twice as Executive Officer of Idaho and was honored in 1994 with
the DeMolay Eagle Award for Most Improved Jurisdiction, in 2001
for Executive Officer of the Year, and in 2003 for Member of
the Year.
His fraternal affiliations include Paradise Lodge
#17, Grand Lodge of Minnesota, the York Rite Bodies, Calam Shrine,
Order
of Eastern Star, Red Cross of Constantine, Royal Order of Scotland,
and Job’s Daughters.
An agent with Farmers Insurance, Bro. Kimberling
owns Kimberling Insurance in Orofino, Idaho, is affiliated with
Newsome & Kimberling
Insurance in Moscow, Idaho, and has received a number of awards
from Farmers Insurance Group. The former Mayor of Wallace,
Idaho, he continues to be involved in a number of community-based
organizations.
Grand Master Kimberling says, “My participation in DeMolay
has opened many positive doors for me in my lifetime. My current
involvement with DeMolay gives me the same opportunity to make
a difference in the lives of our future leaders.”
Note: The full DeMolay press release on Bro. Kimberling’s
election may be read in the NEWS section (Jul. 26-Aug. 8 segment)
on the Supreme Council’s Web site www.srmason-sj.org.
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SGC
Seale Initiated as Member in Perpetuity
in National Sojourners,
Inc.

On July 21, 2004, in the Lodge Room of historic
Gatsby’s Tavern in Alexandria, Virginia, SGC Ronald A.
Seale, 33°, was initiated as a Member in Perpetuity during
a regular monthly meeting, attended by more than 70 members
and guests, of Old Dominion Chapter #364, National Sojourners
Inc.,
an American Military Masonic Body. Ill. Seale has served as
a Captain in the U.S. Army. He was accompanied by Ill. William
G. Sizemore, 33°, GC, Grand Executive Director of the Supreme
Council, 33°, and Dean R. Alban, 33°, Director of Information
Systems for the Supreme Council. Ill. Alban was initiated an
Honorary Member in Perpetuity of National Sojourners. Also
attending was RW John R. Quinley, 32°, KCCH, Deputy Grand
Master, Grand Lodge of Virginia. Pictured above after the initiation
are (l.
to r.): Ill. Bros. Alban, Seale, Bro. Hans S. Pawlisch, 32°,
President of the Old Dominion Chapter #364, and Sizemore.
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Minnesota Opens Second RiteCare Clinic

Photo: Fred W. Pagenkopf, 32°,
Valley of Minneapolis, Minn.
The formal dedication of the new Elk River RiteCare
Childhood Language Clinic took place in Elk River, a suburb
of Minneapolis, Minnesota, on June 26, 2004. Approximately 500
people
were present for the cornerstone ceremony conducted by MW Gerald
E. Rhoads, 33°, Grand Master of Masons in Minnesota. Jerry
B. Oliver, 33°, SGIG in Minnesota, presided over the day’s
activities, and James O. Burlingame, 33°, Personal Representative
in Minneapolis, was Master of Ceremonies.
|
|
| Colorful Masonic units, such as
Minnesota Chapter 25 of the National Sojourners, Inc.,
Heroes of ’76, participated in the dedication of
the Elk River Clinic. Photo:
Fred W. Pagenkopf, 32°,
Valley of Minneapolis, Minn. |
In addition to other Masonic notables, the festivities
were attended by Patricia “Pat” Rasmusson, Most Worthy Grand Matron,
General Grand Chapter, OES; W. Nathaniel Howell, Former U.S.
Ambassador to Kuwait; and Earl E. Ihle, Jr., 33°, Director
of Development for the Supreme Council, S.J., as well as representatives
from several Lodges, OES Chapters, Zuhrah Shrine Nobles, and
National Sojourners Heroes of ’76.
Clinic Director Mischelle Blenkush noted that
the beautiful new clinic building, donated by the Marafie Foundation
USA,
is a
state-of-the-art facility and is already screening more than
50 applicants seeking treatment. Thanks to the public relations
efforts of Carl F. Nelson, 33°, and his wife, Leslie, the
dedication was featured in local newspapers and has already brought
an outpouring of financial support, kicking off a major fund-raising
campaign chaired by Daniel M. Bros, 32°.
The Elk River clinic is the result of two good-hearted
men who just happened to move into the same condominium building,
Amir
Marafie, who is not a Mason, and Ill. Carl F. Nelson. Mr. Marafie
and his wife, Lulu, have a burning desire to help others, especially
children. As a result, the Marafies offered the new building
to house a clinic in a real estate development the Marafie
Foundation USA is completing in Elk River. In addition to donating
the building,
the Marafies decorated it with several child-friendly original
works of art and even supplied dishes and kitchen-ware. Mrs.
Marafie was an active participant in all aspects of the clinic’s
completion, even to choosing the interior colors and furnishings.
Due to the support of the Marafies and the Minneapolis Brethren,
many more children will have the chance to reach their full potentials
in communication and learning. See the inside front cover of
this issue for more photos from the dedication of the Elk River
RiteCare Clinic.
(Click here to view more photos from the dedication.)
Submitted by Gary A. Odegard,
33°,
President, S.R. Childhood Language
Clinics of Minnesota, Inc.,
Acting Senior Grand Warden, Grand Lodge of Minnesota
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Update
on the Scottish Rite National
Disaster Relief Scholarship
Fund
During a visit on July 28,
2004, to the House of the Temple in Washington, D.C., Ill.
Robert
J. Dole, 33°,
Grand Cross, received a check for $50,000 from Grand Commander
Ronald A. Seale, 33°. Thanks to the generosity of the Brethren
of the Southern Jurisdiction, each year, for up to 20 years,
the Scottish Rite Foundation, S.J., will contribute $50,000 to
the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund of Scholarship America
in support of 9/11 disaster victims. Photo: Elizabeth
A. Williams, The Scottish Rite Journal
Scholarship America (formerly, the Citizens’ Scholarship
Foundation of America) launched the Families of Freedom Scholarship
Fund on September 17, 2001, in response to the terrorist attacks
on September 11, 2001. The Fund’s purpose is to provide
education assistance for post secondary study to dependents
of those killed or permanently disabled as a result of the
terrorist
attacks and during the rescue activities relating to those
attacks. The beneficiaries of the Fund include airline passengers
and
crew, World Trade Center and Pentagon workers and visitors,
and firefighters, emergency medical personnel, and law enforcement
personnel injured in the attacks and related rescue efforts.
On September 9, 2002, the Scottish Rite Foundation,
Southern Jurisdiction, USA, Inc. joined in this effort by launching
the Scottish Rite National Disaster Relief Scholarship Fund
and allocating
to it $1,000,000 to be used for scholarships. Each year, for
up to 20 years, the Scottish Rite Foundation, S.J., will contribute
$50,000 to the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund of Scholarship
America. This money will be distributed as scholarships to
eligible individuals. Scholarships will be for $5,000 each,
and up to
10 scholarships can be funded each year. In a brief ceremony
on September 9, 2002, the first check for $50,000 was presented
to Ill. Robert J. Dole, 33°, Grand Cross, former Senate
Majority Leader and Chair of the Families of Freedom Scholarship
Fund.
Through December 31, 2003, 20 $5,000 scholarships
have been awarded to 15 individuals for study at accredited schools
during
the
period from the fall of 2002 to the winter/spring of 2004.
The total amount that has been awarded to all recipients
as of December
31, 2003, is $100,000. The awards have been for study at
the college and graduate school levels.
Ten of the scholarship recipients are the children
of victims; four are spouses of victims; and one was engaged
to a victim.
Multiple scholarships have been awarded to three of the
recipients, helping to fund two or three semesters of study for
those
students. The recipients are majoring in the following
disciplines: Medicine,
Public Health, Social Work, Physical Therapy, Speech and
Language Pathology, Nursing, Medical Technology, Epidemiology,
Biology,
Law, Accounting and Finance, English, Social Work, Education,
and Visual Arts Administration. The Scottish Rite Brethren
should be very proud of providing these scholarships to
help individuals
who lost so much on September 11, 2001. Brethren who wish
to contribute to the Scottish Rite National Disaster Relief
Scholarship
Fund may send checks earmarked for this purpose to: The
Scottish Rite Foundation, S.J., 1733 16th St., NW, Washington,
DC
20009-3103. Thank you very much!
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