Word: cardinales
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"She was not a mystical person in an unattainable niche. She battled against odds in the trials of life with American stamina and cheerfulness; she worked and succeeded with American efficiency." So the late Francis Cardinal Spellman characterized Elizabeth Bayley Seton, a 19th century Roman Catholic convert who founded the...
Monsignor Eugene V. Clark, a spokesman for Cardinal Cooke of the New York archdiocese, fired off a heated telegram of protest to President Ford, demanding that Butz "apologize immediately or resign." A chastened Butz is sued a statement saying that his gaffe "was not intended to impugn the motives or...
In a church torn by internal dissent, Bernardin is not as easily identified with either church wing as were his two predecessors, Detroit's John Cardinal Dearden, a favorite of liberals, and Philadelphia's John Cardinal Krol, a respected conservative. Theologically moderate but socially progressive, Bernardin is perhaps...
Bouncing Back. In the N.F.C. East, the Cardinals could easily be renamed the Cinderellas. This summer, Second-Year Coach Don Coryell told his players that they would win ten games-a bold prediction considering that the team lost nine last season. Yet the players believed. Following the example of Coryell...
Carter was not the only prelate to resurrect the idea of married priests. Recognizing that evangelization involves the whole question of the church's ministry, Zaire's Joseph Cardinal Ma-lula asked that the bishops consider new ministries for which married clergy might be suitable. As for women...