Word: domenica
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Says Rossi: "It seemed incredible that they could have overlooked such a basic point-that photographers use telephoto lenses. It seemed like a huge joke." Italy's Domenica del Corriere and The Netherlands' Nieuwe Revue last week gave their readers Rossi's photos. Paris-Match also purchased the pictures but claimed that it did not have the space to run them. Some cynics suggested, however, that Match's restraint might have something to do with the French Foreign Ministry...
...last days? Said McLaughlin: "I did not want to say anything by way of a public defense that might inhibit him from recognizing that he should resign." There the maverick Jesuit was in agreement with Rome. Writing on Nixon's demise in L 'Osservatore della Domenica last week, Vatican Press Officer Federico Alessandrini concluded that the Watergate case had raised "a constitutional issue that left no choice open to any U.S. political parties, not even to the Republicans. The resignation was the conclusion of a story that ended with only one victor: liberty...
Hogan said that inflation would be Ford's "number 1 problem." Rep. Peter Domenica (R-N.M.) predicted that to control it the new president would pursue a "tough, conservative fiscal policy, bordering on austerity...
Once, when he was Archbishop of Paris, the late Pope John XXIII visited Rome to see Pope Pius XII and deliver a report to the papal secretary of state, Archbishop Giovanni Battista Montini. Afterward, says the Milan newspaper Domenica Del Corriere, Pope John's secretary and protégé Don Angelo Rossi asked what had impressed him most about the trip; was it the audience with His Holiness? "No," was the reply, "I am always calm when I see the Pope. But if there is one personality I stand a little in awe of, that is Monsignor Montini...
What is remarkable is the fact that more nuns have not complained and that many of the young Indian girls have adjusted well to convent life. The Vatican weekly, L'Osservatore della Domenica, this week published a story on happy Indian novices, including some ready to take their vows. But others are still disillusioned. In a letter released to the press, Anna E.T. Elakattu, a novice in Italy, described the details of her drudgery. "They tell us they bought us for 6,000 rupees," she added dramatically. "What can we slaves do?" The letter made big news in Italy...