NEWS
You know you're in Washington when you walk into a hotel and everyone around you works for the media. And they're here — in spades. Some 5,000 journalists have signed up to cover the visit of Pope Benedict XVI to the United States and, having nothing else to do but sit and wait for his arrival at Andrews Air Force base here in Washington at 4 p.m., we're keeping busy keeping the U.S. Secret Service busy.
The hordes are here
By Catholic News ServiceCanadian 'censorship' bill angers artistic community
By Deborah Gyapong, Canadian Catholic News{mosimage}OTTAWA - Liberal MP Denis Corderre says the next election will be fought over censorship.
But the newly minted Heritage Critic was not speaking about press freedom in light of hate speech complaints levied against , and Ezra Levant, the former publisher of the .
And they'll know we are Catholics...
By Catholic News ServiceAnd they'll know we are Catholics...
By Catholic News ServiceThat hoary old folk hymn said "they'll know we are Christians by our love." But how will they know we are Catholics? In modern secular society, Catholics fit right in. There are few visible signs they wear. Crucifixes are just as likely to be a fashion accessory as a statement of faith. But scratch a Catholic and you'll find a surprising amount of religious tradition.
Here comes everybody!
By Catholic News ServiceJames Joyce once described the Roman Catholic Church as "Here comes everybody!" In the United States, his description rings true. American Catholics are a diverse and somewhat unruly bunch and attempts to paint them into categorical corners usually founder on the facts. Pope Benedict XVI will no doubt find this out for himself during his visit April 15-20.
Here comes everybody!
By Catholic News ServiceSweatshop monitors finger Ontario school uniform supplier
By Michael Swan, The Catholic RegisterWorkers at the Lianglong Socks Ltd. factory in Zhuji City, China, are sleeping in unheated dormitories and working unpaid overtime in a factory deemed dirty, unhealthy and unsafe, according to the WRC. For a lot of Catholic school students across Ontario, thatöÏÓãÊÓƵapp an issue.
Canadian mine disrupts Honduran lives
By CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE{mosimage}PALO RALO, Honduras - Nine years ago, Rodolfo Arteaga was sitting on a gold mine — literally. In fact, so was his village of Palo Ralo, in the central Siria Valley of Honduras.
But Arteaga said his and his familyöÏÓãÊÓƵapp lives have not improved and he wishes he could turn back the clock.
Pilgrims take on elements in Ark journey
By Deborah Gyapong, Canadian Catholic News{mosimage}OTTAWA - The pilgrims carrying the Ark of the New Covenant have faced snow and rain and shine. They have become experts in caring for blisters. Some of them have sunburns on their faces.
We're not at Sapienza U. anymore
By Catholic News ServiceAmericans have come a long way from being a people who couldn't bring themselves to electing a Catholic president. Today, a few days before Pope Benedict's arrival on his first visit to the United States, a new poll suggests that, by and large, Americans are reasonably well-disposed toward the German pontiff.