Maybe these will give you some more leads
http://www.catholicleague.org/resear...erangelica.htm
In 1993 Mother Angelica had her third audience with the pope and presented him with photos of the new radio station. That summer EWTN provided live coverage of World Youth Day '93 in Denver, Colorado, and Mother Angelica gained attention for one of her most outspoken criticisms of liberal Catholicism yet. Specifically, she objected to the fact that a woman played the role of Jesus in an enactment of the Stations of the Cross presented by a Catholic theater troupe. Mother Angelica was one of about a dozen prominent Catholics who signed a letter to the Vatican denouncing the performance.
Time magazine quoted her as saying, "Enough is enough. I'm tired of inclusive language that refuses to admit that the Son of God is a man. I'm tired of you, liberal church in America. You're sick." The incident solidified her reputation as an opponent of feminists, liberals, and of what she perceived as a watering-down of the church's teachings. Some Catholics were attracted to Mother Angelica's
evocation of the traditional certitudes of the church as it existed before the Vatican II reforms of the 1960s. Other church figures regretted that her
strident defense of orthodox Catholicism was being broadcast around the world. In an article in the
National Catholic Reporter, for example, Jesuit priest Raymond Schroth decried what he perceived as a lack of intellectual sophistication on Mother Angelica's part, pointing to her broadcast of the traditional Latin Mass, her belief in the literal reality of miracles, and her only partial acceptance of Vatican II reforms.
http://www.answers.com/topic/eternal...rk?cat=biz-fin
Hope this helps