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Although 6-ft. 5-in. tall, Bernie Kosar of Youngstown, Ohio, and Miami, Fla., was still only 21. To give Kosar time, Veteran Gary Danielson was acquired from Detroit, but in the fifth game last season Danielson fell. By then, he knew his understudy's talent. "I'll either be out two weeks," he predicted, "or 15 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Success Story of the Year | 1/5/1987 | See Source »

...nearly equal numbers take their stations at jobs that have less and less to do with making things and more with providing "services." (A service manufactures happiness for the sedentary.) Messengers deliver messages, cleaners clean, lawyers bill. The pace is heady, overwhelming, if one does not include cities like Youngstown, Ohio, where the steel industry has been nailed shut for the past few years, and small farms in Kansas and South Carolina that lie as graveyards to unpaid mortgages. Everybody seems to know everything everywhere. The television news displays a riot in an overcrowded Tennessee prison, a newly discovered poem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: Time Capsule: A Letter to the Year 2086 | 12/29/1986 | See Source »

...president of the U.S. bishops' conference, James Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, had opened the meeting with a warning of his own: there is "growing and dangerous disaffection" between sectors of the U.S. church and the Vatican. He remarked that "some persons," mistakenly, are now questioning the "timeliness and utility" of the Pope's tour of the U.S. next September. Malone also announced he had asked that bishops be granted the opportunity to brief the Pope in person on the situation he will face...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Unreservedly Loyal to the Pope | 11/24/1986 | See Source »

Boston's Bernard Cardinal Law, a strong advocate of the catechism idea, also differed somewhat with the president of the U.S. hierarchy, James Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, about the increasingly important role played in the church by national bishops' conferences. Malone emphasized their importance to the church in collective policymaking, and argued that the teaching authority of the conferences, on certain issues and in cooperation with the Pope, should be recognized by Rome. Law, however, warned that national conferences should never usurp the powers of individual bishops...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: At the Synod, Variety in Unity | 12/16/1985 | See Source »

Attending a retreat with a group of priests in Youngstown last week, Malone told TIME, "What we need now is not to turn aside from Vatican II teaching but to grasp it with new enthusiasm and to pursue its implementation with new vigor." Since the synod will provide only two weeks to do that, Malone's report also asserted, it might be time for a special U.S. synod to deal with Vatican II. Though the U.S. bishops meet briefly once or twice a year, their last extended national council was in 1884. The U.S. bishops' conference and the Vatican have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: An American Agenda for Rome U.S. Bishops Help Lay the Groundwork for A Vatican synod | 9/30/1985 | See Source »

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