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V
2 GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967
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Seasons Greetings
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ALDERMAN 1st WARD
CITY OF ATLANTA
*****
J. AUSTIN DILLON, President
MRS. J. AUSTIN DILLON, Treasurer
MRS. JANE AUSTIN ELROD, Secretary
*****
J. AUSTIN DILLON CO.
Funeral Directors - Ambulance Service
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Inner-City
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
too late; maybe we've gone too
long without doing enough right
in the neighborhood. We have
to meet the human needs that
are staring us in the face all
the time.”
A tutorial program is planned
for children at Grady Homes,
and several college students are
working at Emmaus House
and in the Summerhill district,
F atherDillmannsaid.
"But should the parish con
tinue in the traditional sense?"
the priest asked. “As a priest
from a middle-class back
ground whose ministry has been
to the white middle-class, I am
trying to 'tune in’.”
"If seminarians could live in
a center and take courses at
the very good educational in
stitutions we have in Atlanta,
working in the inner city during
their spare time, this location
would provide an ideal center
for them. Let them stay here
where the action is, and get
some experience."
Most of the transients who
visit Our Lady of Lourdes are
white and non-parishoners, Fa
ther Dillmann said. At'Sacred
Heart, 70 per cent of the more
than $300 a month spent on food
tickets and lodging for tran
sients goes to non-parishoners,
said Father Mulroy.
An awareness of the poor is
a tradition at Sacred Heart
parish, Father Mulroy said.
An office for the poor is open
from 8 a.m. - 10 p.m. in the
rectory. Records of financial
aid and referrals are filed, and
the work coordinated with other
community agencies, Father
Mulroy said.
"Our day begins with the first
phone call at 6:30 a.m. At night
there are calls from threatened
suicides, or hospital calls.
When the doorbell rings after
1 a.m. it is usually someone
high on drugs, or once in a
while, someone who has been
drinking too much. When we
ask them why they don't talk
to their own clergymen, they
often don't want him to know.”
, **rhere - ih&H'*!. . tremendous
visiting population here, "Fa
ther Mulroy said, "People come
in for advice because they are
away from home, or to go to con-
BULLETIN ADS
BRING RESULTS
fession before they' go home.”
College students with pro
blems, a few hippies, and the
'snowbirds'—migrant workers
on their way to Florida for the
winter- all have found their way
to the door. "Some come just
to talk, and others for help,”
the priest said.
"We had one lad come in
here who was going out to walk
into eternity,” said Father
Murray. “We talked to him,
and put him in the hospital.
He’s all right now.”
"There are people definitely
in need through no fault of their
own-older men and women with
no families to care for them,
people referred to us by other
agencies for aid. There are
more non-Catholics than Ca
tholics helped,” Father Murray
said.
Priests from the Shrine visit
the juvenile home, the jail and
rest homes. "The biggest
source of work is at grady, '
Father Murray said, where
Father Raphael McDonald is ex-
officio Catholic chaplain."
Priests of the three parishes
visit the downtown hospitals
daily. In the past two years,
cooperation with community
agencies has improved, said
Father Murray. Dialogues with
other churches in the area and
with the agencies are planned
this year to coordinate the work
of serving the poor and the
transients. And the parishes
plan to set up a clearing-house
to coordinate their work with
the poor.
"We hope that through an
Open dialogue on poverty and
visits to the agencies the church
will be able to coordinate the
work," Father Mulroy said.
All three pastors praised the
St. Vincent de Paul Society
for its dedication. Father Mur
ray said, "In the past two years
the community agencies have
come to recognize the effect the
work of the Church through the
e fforts of the St. Vincent de Paul
Society and now we are getting
calls' from them seeking our as
sistance." "They are dedicated
men who operate a city-wide
program," Father Mulroy said.
Although the freeways have
chopped up the parishes, the
priests agreed that the church
will be in the inner-city and
come into its own with high
rise apartments. "The church
will be here and will come back
into its own. We will be pre
pared for them."
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(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
visit had been rumored for
several days and local com
munists had already prepared
protest demonstrations.
Yet the way it actually hap
pened in Rome took many by
surprise.
The President arrived by
helicopter, after visiting Italy's
President Giuseppe Saragat.
President Johnson’s helicopter
landed in the Vatican gardens,
in an open area near the sum
mit of Vatican hill. Meeting
the President as he got out of
the helicopter was Archbishop .
Giovanni Benelli, the Holy See’s
undersecretary of state for or
dinary affairs, Msgr. Paul Mai-
cinkus of the Chicago archdio
cese, an official of the Papal
Secretariat of State, and Count
Enrico Galeazzi, special dele
gate of the Pontifical Commis
sion of Vatican City.
The President was driven to
the Vatican palace's central
courtyard ofSanDamaso, where
he was greeted by various Vati
can officials, including 'Msgr.
Daniel Cronin of the Boston
archdiocese, also an official of
the Secretariat of State.
President Johnson was es
corted to the papal state apart
ments by Vatican officials and
Swiss Guards and was given a
loud ovation ott the way by sem
inarians of the North American
College in Rome. Pope Paul
met the President at the door
of his library to welcome him.
The President and the Pope met
each other at 8:59 p.m. Rome
time and the President's heli
copter took off at 10:30 p.m.
The actual audience lasted
just over an hour. Together
with the Pope and the President
were Papal Secretary of State
Amleto Cardinal Cicognani
Archbishop Agostino Casaroli,
undersecretary of state for ex
traordinary affairs and long ex
perienced in Iron Curtain af
fairs; Msgr. Marcinkus, who
acted as Pope Paul’s transla
tor; and Jack Valenti, former
presidential aide who acted as
the President’s translator.
At the end of the meeting,
Pope Paul gave President John
son a 15th-century painting of
the Nativity, a copy of his en
cyclical, The Development of
Peoples, and medals for his
grandson Patrick and for his
recently married daughter Lyn
da. The Pope also had gifts for
U.S. ambassador to Italy Fred
eric Reinhardt and the Presi
dent’s advisor for foreign af
fairs, Walter Rostow.
President Johnson presented
the Pope with a small bronze
bust of himself which he told
the Pope his daughter Luci had
asked especially that he give
to the Pope.
After the meeting, the Vati
can issued the'following bulle
tin:
“His Holiness Pope Paul VI,
at 9:00 p.m. tonight (Dec. 23)
received in private audience His
E xcellency Mr. Lyndon B. John
son, President of the United
States of America, offered by
the opportunity of the brief
stopover which he had made in
Rome enroute and returning
’from Australia.
"The conversation, held in
_the private library of His Holi
ness, lasted more than an hour.
The meeting was consonant with
the common desire of the Holy
Father and the President of the
United States to examine some
very pressing problems, and in
particular with reference to the
conflict in Vietnam.
"President Johnson explain
ed his view of the existing sit
uation in Vietnam and of the
means for reaching a solution
to the conflict. He moreover
reassured the Holy Father of
h is personal intention and of that
of his country to seek a solu
tion by negotiation. His Holi
ness manifested to President
Beatification
Slated In ‘68
VATICAN CITY (RNS)—Sis
ter Clelia Barbieri, Italian
foundress of a religious order
to whom has bee n attributed
an unusual form of miracle is
scheduled for beatification here
during 1968.
Cardinals and theologians of
the Sacred Congregation of
Rites discussed and approved
the two miracles necessary for
beatification. The ceremony
may take place on July 13, the
anniversary of Sister Clelia's
death in 1870.
According to statements
verified by Giovanni Ojetti, the
advocate of her cause, the nun’s
voice has been heard repeated
ly, since her death, in convents
of the Italian religious order she
fdunded, Le Suore Midime dell
'Addolorata.
J ohnson his concerned and sor
rowful concern regarding the
state of things which deeply
gives him anguish because of
his pastoral ministry and be
cause of the great needs of hu
manity.
"The Holy Father presented
some requests and advanced
suggestions regarding the man
ner in which, according to his
j udgment, the conflict might be
best resolved, as he ardently
hopes it will be.
"The August Pontiff stressed
also the urgent necessity for in
ternational cooperation and
solidarity in every area and
especially in the sphere of as
sistance and help for develop
ing countries, recognizing the
results already obtained by the
vast programs already launched
by the United States of Ameri
ca.
"At the end of the audience,
the President’s companions
were brought in, to whom the
Holy Father spoke with friend
liness and to whom he extended
the seasons’ greetings.”
Aiding Future Priests
The future priests of North Georgia have their work cut out
for them. But the job of training them is everpresent. A
donation to the Seminary Fund at Christmas can lighten that job
considerably. Contributions may be sent to Archdiocese of
Atlanta, P.O. Box 12047, Northside Station, Atlanta, Ga. 30305.
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