Word: archbishop
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...ambitions." Radio Warsaw accused him of "fanning the conflict that he himself created for the sake of the most re actionary objectives." Zycie Warszawy, the government's prominent morning paper, came out for the cardinal's ouster from the church's leadership and his replacement by Archbishop Boleslaw Kominek of Wroclaw, the cardinal's second in command and a man considered more "reasonable" and pliant. But even the archbishop must raise a few Red doubts. "On questions of the existence of the church," Archbishop Kominek vowed recently, "we [the hierarchy] are always together...
...Archbishop lakovos, LL.D., Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in the Americas. As a professor of future priests, he taught them to replace polemics with irenics and isolation with collaboration...
...What Hitler's bombs could not do, socialism did." Billy now is on good terms with Prime Minister Wilson, but last week, without pinpointing the enemy specifically, he declared: "I feel greater opposition than ever before." The crusade has been ignored by both fundamentalists and progressive theologians; the Archbishop of York issued a lukewarm endorsement, while Canterbury made it publicly and pointedly clear that Billy did not have Anglican sponsorship. Humanists passed out leaflets with the warning headline: "DANGER-Psychologist at Work...
Last week Barcelona's aging (76) Archbishop Gregorio Modrego Casáus was doing his best to keep the lid on. Calling all publicity "harmful," he appealed to the press to forgo any further news or comment on the police attack; he also sent a bland message to his parish priests, to be read at Sunday Masses. Since the message virtually ignored the question of police brutality to clergymen, many priests added a few choice words of their own at the end. "One of our newspapers' slogans," snapped Father Narciso Saguer Vilar of San Ildefonso's Church...
...church crisis deepened, Spain's eager young priests could count on a valuable new ally: Monsignor Marcelo González Martín, 48, who was installed last week as coadjutor, chief troubleshooter and heir apparent of Barcelona's archbishop. Though Monsignor González is non-Catalán in a rabidly Catalán diocese, he very quickly won over his first congregation at Barcelona's Gothic Santa Eulalia Cathedral, shunning the tiresome platitudes that his audience was so accustomed to. "I promise you," Monsignor González said with feeling and warmth, "that...