from my customers.
You will receive receipt of payment and shipping date.
Free shipping and thanks!
YOU ARE BUYING 1 NEWSPAPER THE WASHINGTON POST,DATED APRIL 3,2005
John Paul II Dies at 84 Long-Serving and Well-Traveled Pope Persevered Despite Illness By Daniel Williams and Alan Cooperman Washington Post Foreign Service Sunday, April 3, 2005; Page A01 VATICAN CITY, April 2 -- John Paul II, the voyager pope who helped conquer communism and transformed the papacy with charisma and vigor, died Saturday night after a long battle with Parkinson's disease that became a lesson to the world in humble suffering.
"Our most beloved Holy Father has returned to the house of the Father," Archbishop Leonardo Sandri, a senior Vatican official, told pilgrims in St. Peter's Square. The throng of about 60,000 momentarily stood in stunned silence, stared at the pavement and wept. Then, following an Italian custom that signifies hope at a time of death, the mourners broke into sustained applause.
NEWSPAPER IS NEW AND NEVER READ,FOR YOUR COLLECTION,and is a thick,heavy newspaper to ship,front page stories, Labyrinth of Political Challenges Preceded Today's Debut at RFK By Lori Montgomery, Barry Svrluga and Thomas Heath On a steamy morning in August, key figures in the campaign to bring baseball to Northern Virginia gathered in a Georgetown law office for a meeting with Major League Baseball. They had some shocking news.
By Hanna Rosin So much was expected of Karol Wojtyla when he became pope in 1978. Here, for the first time, was a pontiff plucked not from the Vatican's perfumed inner chambers, but a man of the world. He was not Italian; he skied, he kayaked, he acted in dramas. His fellow clerics compared him to John Wayne.
John Paul II Dies at 84 Long-Serving and Well-Traveled Pope Persevered Despite Illness By Daniel Williams and Alan Cooperman VATICAN CITY, April 2 -- John Paul II, the voyager pope who helped conquer communism and transformed the papacy with charisma and vigor, died Saturday night after a long battle with Parkinson's disease that became a lesson to the world in humble suffering.
Pontiff's Road Map Will Guide Selection By Daniel Williams VATICAN CITY, April 2 -- Shrouded in deep secrecy and rooted in medieval tradition, the choice of the next pope will bear the legacy of John Paul II, who appointed all but three of the 117 voting cardinals who will gather beneath the frescoed ceiling of the Sistine Chapel to choose his successor. When they write the names of candidates by hand on rectangular cards for the balloting, it will be under rules that John Paul set nearly a decade ago.
THE PICTURE YOU ARE VIEWING OF POPE JOHN PAUL II IS ON THE FRONT PAGE