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(Vatican Radio) The opposition coalition in Venezuela is planning sustained street protests, after a ruling by The National Electoral Council, not to allow a Referendum on the Presidency of Nicolas Maduro this year.Listen to the report by James Blears: Venezuela`s National Electoral Council says there can only be a Referendum on the rule of President Nicolas Maduro, towards the end of next year. Also, rather than a set target figure, the signatures of at least 20 percent of the voters in each and every State in Venezuela would be required. This in effect means that the January 10th deadline will be missed. After that day, even if the vote goes against Nicolas Maduro, his Vice President would step up to rule until the term ended in 2018. The opposition is now planning mass street protests to increase the pressure on President Maduro, who`s vowing NOT to be forced out. Henrique Capriles who lost the Presidential Electi...
Phoenix, Ariz., Sep 23, 2016 / 12:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis has not changed Catholic practice on Holy Communion for the divorced and remarried. Rather, his goal is to help welcome them to the Church, Phoenix’s Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted has said.The Pope gives “special attention to those who walk on the edge of despair” because of personal failures, family problems, and “the complex and contradictory situations in which they find themselves now,” Bishop Olmsted said in his Sept. 18 column for The Catholic Sun.The bishop considered Pope Francis' 2016 apostolic exhortation “Amoris Laetitia,” especially as it concerns couples in irregular situations like the divorced and remarried.The exhortation does not advocate the reception of Holy Communion for those who are divorced and remarried, he said.“Pope Francis specifically calls those in this situation ‘to seek the grace of conversion’,” the Phoenix bishop sai...
ATLANTA (AP) -- The Tour Championship is a lot tougher than it needs to be for Justin Thomas....
EAST CHICAGO, Ind. (AP) -- When the mayor in this industrial town ordered the evacuation of a 40-year-old public-housing complex this summer because of severe lead contamination, many people wondered: How could the problem have been overlooked for so long?...
ATLANTA (AP) -- With more than 120 million Americans expected to cast ballots for president this fall, the nation's voting process seems more convoluted than ever and rife with potential for confusion come Election Day....
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is seeking to show law-and-order toughness along with empathy for African-Americans as he criticizes violent protests stemming from another fatal police shooting of a black man....
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Yahoo has been struggling for years to keep people coming back to its digital services such as email. That challenge just got more daunting after hackers stole sensitive information from at least 500 million accounts....
NEW YORK (AP) -- With prospects plummeting to revive an all but dead Syria cease-fire, the United States and Russia have grudgingly agreed to another round of talks to keep hopes alive....
The father of the man charged with setting off bombs in New York and New Jersey informed the FBI in 2014 about his son's apparent radicalization, he said....
TULSA, Okla. (AP) -- Less than a week after an unarmed black man was shot dead by a white police officer on a Tulsa street, prosecutors charged the officer with first-degree manslaughter, a decision that may prevent unrest in a city with a long history of tense race relations....

