Word: documenting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...status of "el Companero Ernesto Guevara," Castro gave only the vaguest hints as to what that status might be. "The enemy has put out many guesses and rumors, sometimes confused, sometimes trying to confuse," said Castro. "Well, in a few days, we are going to read a document by el Compañero Ernesto Guevara that explains his absence during these past months." With that, Castro teased his audience by waving a sheet of paper. "This is the act to which I refer," he said. "Read it! Read it!" pleaded the crowd. "Not now," said Castro...
...Paper. Washington's Cuba watchers thought the document might have to do with a Soviet-style constitution calling for the usual circus elections some time in the next few years. According to this theory, Che might have been ordered to draft such a constitution as a kind of act of contrition. The document might also be a manifesto, with Che either penitently apologizing for his errors or bringing his doctrinal dispute with Cuba's Kremlin-Castro leadership into the open. Che is not the type to be easily weaned from belief in his violent revolutionary...
What made the vote on the liberty statement especially significant was that the progressive majority thwarted a last-minute conservative maneuver to shelve the document entirely - and it won with the help of Pope Paul...
...make the incredible statement [Sept. 3] that "the U.S. came to accept the right and duty of the churches to influence legislation when a moral issue was involved." Who or what bestowed this duty? The Founding Fathers? The U.S. Constitution? That Constitution is a civil document dealing with the legal, not the moral, rights and duties by which citizens shall be governed in their relationship with one another. The builder of our Grandiose Society is tearing down the constitutional separation of church and state...
...have turned out now, even Jesuit John Courtney Murray, a principal architect of the declaration, agrees that the text before the fathers at the fourth session is stronger than ever (see box). "The losers won a delay," says Bishop Robert E. Tracy of Baton Rouge. "The winners won a document." Last week, in one of the strongest exchanges of views since the council began, three U.S. cardinals?Gushing of Boston, Spellman of New York, Ritter of St. Louis?were among the prelates who defended the declaration, while Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, secretary of the Holy Office, headed the ranks of Spanish...