VOLUME XXIL NO. 8. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16,1899. PAGES 1 to 8. A-FAIR and FESTIVAL DEATHS Jdukingthewfiek THINGS W

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

VOLUME XXIL NO. 8. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16,1899. PAGES 1 to 8. A-FAIR and FESTIVAL DEATHS Jdukingthewfiek THINGS W VOLUME XXIL NO. 8. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8. THEIR SILVER WEDDING. >8he married William Foster thirty years A-FAIR AND FESTIVAL DEATHS JDUKINGTHEWfiEK ago. She leaves five children. They THINGS WON AT A FAIR. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Koch Mar- are John-Foster, Mrs. Kate Wilmot, Mrs. A HARVEST HOME AT LITTLE ried Twenty-Five Wears. WILLIAM H. GUERNSEY DIES AT FAIR HAVEN DAUGHTERS OF Thomas F. Ga$ill and Lena and Cornelia ° ' SILVER LAST NIGHT. Last Thursday night was the twenty- LIBERTY MAKE 8100, Foster. fifth anniversary of the marriage of Mr Held hu the Women of the Metho ne was Owe of the Most Pronounced - Albert nankins. Miss Anna B. lUinton Won a Bicy- dist Church-Over Eight Hundred and Mrs, Herman Koch of Shrewsbury . ProhibittoMstu ofJUonmouth, and cle, Wm. Bennett Won a Barrel of. Persons Present and About $ftOO avenue. A number of their neighbors •ForTe'tiifr-iBe Kept Up the-Apita- Albert, son of EHPS Hankins of Mata- Potatoes and Charles Dennis Won - Cleared. ; .. and friends arranged a surprise,visit in UanatOelfora.. •.;..:;.•..' •.'[ wan, died of consumption on Monday of a Writtna Desk-Other Winnings. " ©vereighfc hundred persons attended celebration of the event. The.evening William H. Guernsey...of Ce'nterville, last week, aged 22 years. Hejiad been The fair .held -by the Fair Haven the harvest home at, Little.Silver yester- was spent with dancing, singing and in Raritan township,.died last Saturday confined to the house six weeks. He Daughters of Liberty in Monmouth hall 1 day afternoon and evening/The music. The lawn was illuminated with of intermittent; fever , aged fifty years. was not married and besides his parents, laBt week was very successful and over vest homo was held to make up a deficit, Japanese • lanterns. Among those pres- He had been sick about three weeks. he leaves three sisteraand a brother. $100 was icleared. Tlje fair. opeffed-on ; in the pastoft salary,; It was held in ent from Red Bank were Mr. and Mrs. Hewas the son of John C. Guernsey, who Wednesdayjiigh^ and, closed pn .Satur^. the vacant lot on the corner of Prospect G.'. D." Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. formerly lived' at Red Bank "ana"who 1B A FRUIT STORE ROBBED. day night. Tfipre~were five booths at avenue and .the south Rumeon road- MacGlinchy, John Houlihan and Miss- now living to, New ^ork state. About which cake, candy, china ware and Katherine Houlihan. Others present twenty years! ago. William H. Guernsey The Two Thieves are Now in, The ~The~ place waa;;:.decorated w\th bunting County Jail.. fancy articles were sold, ' The booths : ' and Chinese lanterns. Supper was served were from New York.. Mr, and Mrs. moved to what'is riovf Belford to become John Smith of Borden streetand Clar- were decorated with bunting and Chinese from half-past three o'clock in the after- Koch received a number of presents. teacher of the public^school tber§.,. He ence Blackstock of New York, who has lanterns. The booths and the women noon until eleven o'clock at night. Mr. and Mrs. Koch were married on. taught school a few years and. afterward been hoarding" this, summer at Henry who tended them were as follows: ,. < About 400- persons took supper, tickets the island of Heligoland on August 10th, became*a carpenter;and builder, •' He Conk's on Wallace street, are now in Cake—Mrs. Mary Little. Miss AnDle Haise.' - for which cost 85 centB eaoh. lived at Belford until about two years Candy—Mrs. C. D. Chandler. • 1874,_:The island was then a part'of the county jail. They were arrested Chlua ware—Mrs. John Martin, Mrs. W. Edward The chairman of the supper committee England, but' has since been ceded to ago when he traded his house and lot at on Monday for breaking and entering G. Taylor. that place for a farm at Centeryille owned , Mystery table-Miss Elizabeth Cbadwick. was Mrs. Richard Parker. 'Her assist- Germany. They remained, in Germany S. Rogers's fruit store on, Broad street. ; Fancy table—Mrs. 0. P; Wurthley, Mrs. David ants were Mrs. T,homas Lake, Mrs. Ben- until 187,9, when they came to this coun- by'MelVin Yard, and: moved to the latter They stole fruit, cigars, cigarettes, and Bennett, Miss Alice Worthloy. jamin F. King, Mrs. W. H. Carhart.Mrs. try and located at Denver, Colorado. place. '''.•'" '; ' '• • •,'• soda water to the value of §20. "The ice cream tables were waited on Quackenbush, Mrs. Errickaori", Mrs. W, They were in Colorado three years, dur- Mr. Guernsey was a member of the The theft was committed on Sunday by Mrs.-John V. Woodward, Mrs. Wil- C Lippincott, Mrs. W. W. Shampanore, ing the big boom of the Leadville mines. New Montnoutb. Baptist church and of night. The men got.an the building by liam DeWolff, BJrs. George W, Smith Mr8. Judson Mount, Mrs. J. William Lee In 1881 Mrs; Koch's inbther, whof had the Belford; American Mechanics'lodge. forcing the bolt on the rear door. When and Mrs. John Bennett. Mrs. Charles and Mrs. Richard Morris. come to this country with them, died, During the later years of his life he was Mr. Rogers opened the ,store on Monday VanBrunt was cashier and.Mzs, Nels.pn;.. At the ice cream tables about $50 waa and they went back to Germany to settle a radical prohibitionist. He organized morning he discovered that, the place Little acted as general manager. taken in. Miss Bertha King acted as up her estate. They came back to this a prohibition league at Belford'and for bad been robbed. He notified Constable • Several articles were disposed. of by .cashier and she was assisted by Eugene country againin 1886 and located in New several years the prohibition vote at that Wallace Bennett. chance. Miss Anna B. Minton,-daughter Cooper. Those who waited on the tables York.. They lived there two years, when place was larger than the combined pro- Mr. Bennett looked over the premises. of George Minton, won a bicycle. Miss were Mrs. Gilinan Brower and Misses Mr. Koch's health broke down and they hibition vote.in all the rest of Middletown In the rear of the store he found several Minton had but«one chance on the bicy- ' Jennie Heyer, Nellie Zeigler, Viola moved to Red Bank. They have lived township.. When Mr. Guernsey moved bananas that the theives had dropped in cle. A week ago her sister"Mabel won a " Moore, Lottie Quaekenbusji, Mattie Casey at this place ever since. from Belford the interest in prohibition their haBle to get away. He also found bicycle which was chanced off at the ^and Bessw Parker.'~"~ ~ ~Mr. iKboh was born in New York in at that jplace died put -and the league a regular trail of banjanas which led to. Methodist fair. ..!.. '_..::,.. .,i_j ....:„. ' The flower stand was in charge of Miss 1848.' He was actively engaged in busi- disbanded. '...,, .,''.. Wallace street. Continuing on down - A barrel of potatdei, which_lwas do- Mary Parker. Her assistants were Mis: ness enterprises until he moved: to this Mr. Guernsey rmirried Mary Emma Wallace street, Constable Bennett found nated by George Hendrickson, was won; - Mabel White and Miss Grace Crater. place, and for many years was a mem- Compton,' daughter of the late Isaac a banana peel every few feet. In front by William Bennett." „ \ • -. :At this table about $8 was taken in. ber of the firm of Koch Sons & Co.' Mrs.- Compton of.Eelfordi She arid five chil- of W. A. Truex's house on Wallace street A writing desk was donated by Stephen • Koch's name before she was married In a tent on the south side of the lawn dren survive him. • The children are the trail of banana skins stopped. McQormick and this was won by Charles was Baroness Adeline Alexander Wied- was an exhibition of curiosities from Mrs. Joseph Heyer of Belford, Mary . Mr. Bennett discovered that John Dennis. inghoff, daughter of Squire Wiedinghoff. Cuba, South America, Hawaii and India. Emma, Lilian,-, Urosmus and Edward Smith, who is employed by Mr. Truex, Miss Mira Doughty won a silver butter She was born at Riga, Russia, in 1852. The curiosities are pwned-by P. F. Farley, Guernsey. He leaves also two brothers. had been loitering around the fruit store dish, a table cover and a pair of slippers. •a retired miner who has,traveled exten- They, orb Elmer and Urasmus Guernsey on Sunday night. The constable got per- Mrs. ~W. Edward- Taylor won a hand- sively. Mr. Farley gave an exhibition An Epworth League Sociable. of -Ne\r York. The funeral was held mission from Mr. Truex to~search his some china cup and saucer. Numerous of washing gold and he also showed the The Epworth league of the First Metho- yesterday at eleven o'clock at the house. barn, and he and Constable Walsh made other small articles were chanced off. • manner of taking gold from quartz rock. dist church held a sociable in the lecture Rev. William V. Wilson and Rev. M. M. the^ search. Some of the stolen goods The American Mechanics fair will An admission fee was charged and $10 room of the church last Thursday night. Finch had charge of the service. were found. The constables then went open next Tuesday night and will be con-, was taken in. The sociable was to have been held on to'sS^nith's' house on~Borden street and tinued for the rest of the week. ; Cigars, soda water and watermelon Arthur L.
Recommended publications
  • Portland Daily Pr Ss
    PORTLAND DAILY PR SS. VOLUME II I THURSDAY PORTLAND, ME., MORNING, SEPTEMBER 24, 1863. WHOLE NO. 380. PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, est point is at 197th street, where it is a few FOR SALE & TO LET. inches below tide water. The new LEGAL & OFFICIAL. BUSINESS CARDS. JOHN T. OILMAN, Editor. reservoir EDUCATIONAL. covers 100 acre*; is about 30 feet holds BUSINESS CARDS. Is at No. EXCHANGE deep, Counting Itooin to Let. published 82* STREET, 1,000,000,000 gallons of water, and cost U. S. USarslinrs $1,500,- ROOM over No. 90 Commercial St. Sale. FRENCH LANGUAGE. IN FOX 000. Around its rim is A CARD. BLOCK, by a walk tor pedestrians; COUNTINGThomas Block, to let. Apply to United Stater ok America, l MILLINERY. N. A. FOSTER A CO. outside of that is a bridle-path, and beyond N. J. MILLER. District of Maine, ss. j a DR. that is a beautiful Five mcli71 dtf Over92 Commercial Street. to Writ of Vend: Expo: to me di- S. C. again carriage-drive. rected from tlie PROFJR HENRI DUCOM FERNALD, miles of have been PURSUANT Hod. Aflhur Ware, .Judge of 'Forms : bridle-path completed; eight the United States District ('ourt, within and for the Has miles of To Lei On and after Monday, Sept. 14th, Kesumed IiIm I ,essnns. The Portland Daily Prk«b i* published every j carriage-road; 18 miles of foot-path. District of Maine, I shall expose ana sell at Public ttEIXTIST, at $0.00 per year in It is a live-mile drive from the or low- commodious Chamber in the northerly cor.
    [Show full text]
  • SENATE Official Committee Hansard
    COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA SENATE Official Committee Hansard INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES COMMITTEE Reference: Self-regulation in the information and communication industries WEDNESDAY, 22 APRIL 1998 SYDNEY BY AUTHORITY OF THE SENATE CANBERRA 1997 INTERNET The Proof and Official Hansard transcripts of Senate committee hearings, some House of Representatives committee hearings and some joint committee hearings are available on the Internet. Some House of Representatives committees and some joint committees make available only Official Hansard transcripts. The Internet address is: http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard SENATE Wednesday, 22 April 1998 SELECT COMMITTEE ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES Members: Senator Ferris (Chair), Senator Quirke (Deputy Chair), Senators Calvert, Harradine, McGauran, Tierney, Reynolds and Stott Despoja Senators attending the hearing: Senator Ferris (Chair), Senator Quirke (Deputy Chair), Senators Calvert and Harradine Matter referred by the Senate for inquiry into and report on: Evaluate the appropriateness, effectiveness and privacy implications of the existing self-regulatory framework in relation to the information and communications industries and, in particular, the adequacy of the complaints regime. WITNESSES BLOCK, Ms Jessica, Corporate Counsel, Nine Network, 24 Artarmon Road, Willoughby, New South Wales 2068 ................................. 332 BRANIGAN, Mr Anthony Michael, General Manager, Federation of Australian Commercial Television Stations, 44 Avenue Road, Mosman, New South Wales 2088 .......................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Mediaportal Report
    WED 04 SEPTEMBER 2013 Mediaportal Report Executive Summary The Sydney Town Hall clocktower media call yesterday generated 33 stories in the past 24 hours. The stories featured on all major metro newspapers, television networks and radio stations, and reached approximately 2.4 million people and were worth and estimated $359,000 in equivalent advertising spend, according to Media Monitors. TOWN HALL Wait for ring finally over MX (Sydney), Sydney, General News 03 Sep 2013 Page 6 - 63 words - ASR AUD 297 Photo: No - Type: News Item - Size: 27.47 cm² - NSW - Australia - ID: 211412058 THE Sydney Town Hall bells were sounded today for the first time in 532 days, following extensive repairs and restoration. The clocktower belfry, some 55m above George St, has been restored by experts during the past 17 months. The 129-year-old clock and its bell are operated by a car-sized mechanism and a spokeswoman said the repair was the first stage of restoring Town Hall. Copyright Agency Ltd (CAL) licensed copy View print article 97,970 CIRCULATION COPYRIGHT This report and its contents are for the internal research use of Mediaportal subscribers only and may not be provided to any third party by any means for any purpose without the express permission of iSentia and/or the relevant copyright owner. For more information contact [email protected] DISCLAIMER iSentia uses multiple audience data sources for press, internet, TV and radio, including AGB Nielsen Media Research, Audit Bureau of Circulations, comScore, CSM Media Research, OzTAM, Nielsen, Research International and TNS. For general information purposes only.
    [Show full text]
  • HALL F AMIL Y·
    HISTORY OF THE HALL FAMIL y· AND ALLIED LINES BY GLADYS HALL MEIER AND ROBERT RENE MARTINDALE ~ Privately Printed BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS 1959 HALL To those brave men of our family who from the time they came to America, down through the generations, have fought to preserve the principles, for which our country stands, I dedicate this book. FOREWORD FoR SOME TIME NOW it has bothered me that there is no one in the family interested enough to continue my work or keep the files I have spent so many years accumulating-hence, this book with the data all under one cover. It is small enough to slip on a bookshelf where it won't be in anyone's way, yet it contains the information I have been gathering for so long a time along with the stories told to me by my grandmother, my aunts, and my mother. Some of them date back to the Revolutionary War, and with the passing of these people, they would have been lost to posterity forever. Bits of this and bits of that, they all help to form the picture that is the Hall family. I have tried to be as accurate as possible, but errors do creep in, and much of my information has been given to me by others. This has been especially true in some of the stories, because I found each person interviewed had their own version. In the two chapters pertaining to the Hall history, personalities and char­ acteristics are given in order to explain movements and situa­ tions.
    [Show full text]
  • Representations of Men and Male Identities
    Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) REPRESENTATIONS OF MEN AND MALE IDENTITIES IN AUSTRALIAN MASS MEDIA J. R. Macnamara 2004 REPRESENTATIONS OF MEN AND MALE IDENTITIES IN AUSTRALIAN MASS MEDIA by James Raymond Macnamara B.A. (Deakin) M.A. (Deakin) A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, College of Arts, Education and Social Sciences, University of Western Sydney 2004 © J. R. Macnamara, 2002-2004 _________________________________________________________________________ i The work presented in this thesis is, to the best of my knowledge and belief, original except as acknowledged in the text. I hereby declare that I have not submitted this material, either in full or in part, for a degree at this or any other institution. Signature : Date: 10 December 2004 _________________________________________________________________________ ii © Copyright 2002-2004 This document is copyright. Except as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968 and Amendments, this document or parts thereof cannot be reproduced in any form without written permission of the copyright owner. Where extracts of this thesis are quoted or paraphrased for research or academic purposes, the source must be acknowledged. _________________________________________________________________________ iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This thesis was guided and assisted by my supervisor, Dr Peter West. His exploration of the position of men and boys in contemporary Australian society inspired me to begin this research and his encouragement and support were generously given throughout. Also this research was supported by associate supervisor, Associate Professor Bob Perry, whose guidance and feedback were invaluable. I am indebted as always to my partner and wife, Gail joy Kenning, who was completing a PhD in digital art during the same period as this research and whose advanced computer knowledge assisted in the setting up of databases and statistical analysis software, as well as being my muse and a pillar of support intellectually and emotionally.
    [Show full text]
  • Portland Daily Press, Business Directory
    ESTABLISHED JUNE 23, 18G2.-YOL. 15. PORTLAND, SATURDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 15, 1877. THE PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, BUSINESS DIRECTORY. business cards. Recent Publications. late Peter Harvey’s reminiscences of Daniel _MISCELLANEOUS. THE PRESS. Webster Published every day (Sundays excepted) by the will goon be published by Little & and PUBLISHING €0. Horse Shoeing. Brown, the first volume of Mr. Bancroft’s PORTLAND SATURDAY His ^ATTADASsr MORXIXG, SEPT. 15. Grandmothers (New York: G. P. Pat continuation of his must be well ad- At 109 Exchange St., Portland. bT B. YOUNG Ac CO., Practical Horse history ! Shoer*. 70 Pearl 8l. Price 81.50 per set nam’sSons;Portland: Loring, Short & Har- vanced by this time. Prof. William Everett is To “FURNITURE Constable Terms: Eight Dollars a Year in advance. for Portland, ad- We do not read mon) is one of the best of the realistic stories understood to be mail subscribers Seven Dollars a Year if paid in Al'D anonymous etterg and communi- preparing memoirs of his Booksellers and Stationers. cations. The name of which Helen’s vance. Coroner and address of the writer are in Babies was the initial volume. father, Edward Everett—whose for Cumberland County, all correspondence HOYT & No. 91 Middle Street. cases indispensable, not necessarily for Many of the works, more or less in imitation was very extensive and rich. FOGG, 31 1-3 publication THE MAINE STATE PRESS IF ACTS I EXCHANGE STREET. but as a guaranty of faith. of that delicious good little history, show plainly the In his forthcoming book "Underbrush” Mr. Morning at $2.50^ a Book Binders.
    [Show full text]
  • Address to the National Press Club
    Page: 1 Transcript Station: MELBOURNE CONFERENCE UNIT Date: 03/06/2015 Program: CONFERENCE Time: 08:00 AM Compere: Summary ID: M00061970042 Item: A U D I O S U P P L I E D B Y C L I E N T Audience: Male 16+ Female 16+ All people N/A N/A N/A VOICE OVER: Today at the National Press Club, Professor Ashok Saluja. Professor Saluja is this year's Australian Society for Medical Research Medallist. Educated in India and the United States, he is internationally renowned for his work on pancreatic cancer. Professor Ashok Saluja with today's National Press Club address. LAURIE WILSON: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome once again to the National Press Club for today's Westpac address. This has been a big week for us here, an eminent week - a week of eminent speakers, I should say. We started with the Secretary-General of Amnesty International, Salil Shetty; Australian of the Year and domestic violence campaigner, Rosie Batty, and we end on an equally high note. It's our pleasure to welcome Professor Ashok Saluja, the winner of the Australian Society for Medical Research Medal for 2015 for his contribution to medical science. After many decades of research, Professor Saluja has developed a drug called Minnelide, which is showing tremendous potential for treating pancreatic cancer. Around a quarter of a million people around the world Page: 2 die each year; five Australians every week die from this disease. It's claimed the lives recently of such well known people as Apple founder Steven Jobs, and indeed my colleague and good friend, one of the most prominent journalists in this country, Peter Harvey from the Nine Network.
    [Show full text]
  • 60 Minutes Australia Tv Guide
    60 minutes australia tv guide Continue 60 MinutesGenreNewsmagazineThe createddon Hewitt (original format)Presented by Liz Hayes (1996-present)Tara Brown (2001-present) Liam Bartlett (2006-2012, 2015-present) Sarah Abo (2019-present) Tom Steinfort (2020-present) Country Of OriginAustralia Original Language (s) seasons40ProductionExecutive Producer (s) Kirsty ThomsonProsactory Location (s)TCN-9 Willoughby, New South WalesUnning time60 minutesReallyorious NetworkNine NetworkPicture format576i (SDTV)1080i (HDTV)Audio formatStereoOriginal release11 February 1979 (1979-02-11) - presentChronRelatedology shows60 Minutes (1968-present) External LinksWebite 60 Minutes US Australian version. The tv magazine show 60 Minutes airing from 1979 on Sunday night on The Nine Network. The New york version uses segments of the show. The show is produced under license from its owner Network Ten (from 2017, an Australian subsidiary of CBS News, which owns the format, which premiered in 1968), which also provides separate international segments for the show. Staff In this section are not given any sources. Please help improve this section by adding links to reliable sources. Non-sources of materials can be challenged and removed. (January 2020) (Learn how and when to delete this template message) Current Correspondents Liz Hayes (1996-present) Tara Brown (2001-present) Liam Bartlett (2006-2012, 2015-present) Sarah Abo (2019-present) Tom Steinfort (2018, 2020-present) Former correspondents George Negus (1979-1986) Ray Martin (1979-1984) Ian Leslie (1979- 1989)
    [Show full text]
  • Get Double Value Foryour Manufacturer's Coupons This Week at Kings: Commodate These Electives
    Page 22 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, November 17,1983 Qarwood Cub Scouts Kenllworth building help out...honor moratorium... seniors' roll... court new officers...PBA problems...page 15 honors.. .page 14 VOL. 91 No. 47 Published Every Thursday Wednesday, November 23, >1983 Serving Cranford, Kenilworth and Garwood USPS 136 800 Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N-J. 25 CENTS And all our thanks. Schoolchanges:coursespared, No matter who you are or where you live. Thanksgiving is usually a day of So come looking for the best in everything from fresh turkeys to fresh fruits In brief traditions. and vegetables, from stuffing mix to pie filling, from soup to nuts. A day when the only person who can outmaneuver Father for a drumstick is We have it all for you—and something more. For, when it all is said and school day, credits increased done-, you make our business, a pleasure just as we try to'make your shopping Grandfather. A day for remembering,that Aunt Louise loves stuffing with \Thanksgiving By ROSALIE GROSS eight class periods instead of seven fail- subjects." chestnuts, but there'd better be some stuffing with oysters for Uncle Herbert. the joy that it ought to be. Eighth graders will be required to ed by a 4 to 5 vote. Department Voting in favor of eight periods were That's why, when you walk out of Kings with a bagful of good food, you also take a one-semester reading course next chairmen who felt that students 'who Charles McCarty, Edna Silvey, Wither- And don't forget the extra yams for cousin Ralph and lots of butter on the acorn The annual community September, but a computer course will take a foreign language would have no ington an* Patti Martinelli.
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding Trauma & Journalism
    Australasian Summer, 2007 Update The Dart Centre Australasia newsletter Understanding trauma & journalism New Australasian DVD Special report On the road with Brett McLeod F the adage that doctors make the worst patients holds true for other Iprofessions, then journalists should be the worst interview subjects. In fact making the News Media and Trauma DVD has shown me that journalists, and photographers, and camera operators are in fact good interviewees – they’re just a bit shy. Everyone I approached agreed to be interviewed, much to my relief. I sent Peter Harvey, (pictured left), a long screed about Dart, the purpose of the DVD, how important his contribution would be, etc. I must have spent an hour on the email. He shot one back within a few minutes saying “Great, let me know when you want to do it.” That was to be the typical response. OR the past four months, senior GTV9 After recording key interviews in Canberra, There was no scientific method involved reporter Brett McLeod has spent a good Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide, Brett’s in selecting subjects. deal of his spare time producing a cross- cross-industry News Media and Trauma DVD F I just picked people I’d worked with industry trauma and journalism awareness is nearing its launch and, he says, he’s more over the years who I felt represented DVD for the Dart Centre Australasia. convinced than ever that such a tool is needed different parts of the industry, with The project grew out of an idea fleshed out by 16 in Australasian newsrooms.
    [Show full text]
  • An Introduction to Buddhist Ethics
    This page intentionally left blank AN INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHIST ETHICS This systematic introduction to Buddhist ethics is aimed at anyone interested in Buddhism, including students, scholars and general readers. Peter Harvey is the author of the acclaimed Introduction to Buddhism (Cambridge, ), and his new book is written in a clear style, assuming no prior knowledge. At the same time it develops a careful, probing analysis of the nature and practical dynamics of Buddhist ethics both in its unifying themes and in the particularities of different Buddhist traditions. The book applies Buddhist ethics to a range of issues of contemporary concern: humanity’s relation- ship with the rest of nature; economics; war and peace; euthana- sia; abortion; sexual equality; and homosexuality. Professor Harvey draws on texts of the main Buddhist traditions, and on historical and contemporary accounts of the behaviour of Buddhists, to describe existing Buddhist ethics, to assess different views within it, and to extend its application into new areas. is Professor of Buddhist Studies at the University of Sunderland. Co-founder of the UK Association for Buddhist Studies, he was the first Professor specifically of ‘Buddhist Studies’ in the UK. He also serves on the editorial board of the very suc- cessful Internet Journal of Buddhist Ethics and that of Contemporary Studies in Buddhism. AN INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHIST ETHICS Foundations, Values and Issues PETER HARVEY University of Sunderland Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge , United Kingdom Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521553940 © Cambridge University Press, 2000 This book is in copyright.
    [Show full text]
  • Diocesan Yearbook 2021
    2021 NOTTINGHAM DIOCESAN YEARBOOK Celebrating the Year of St Joseph 8th December 2020 - 8th December 2021 £4.00 NOTTINGHAMSHIRE DERBYSHIRE LEICESTERSHIRE LINCOLNSHIRE RUTLAND NOTTINGHAM DIOCESAN YEARBOOK 2021 Ninety-ninth edition of the official Diocesan Yearbook published by the Diocese of Nottingham NRCDT A Registered Charity As at 2nd July 2021 Front and back cover designs for the Year of Saint Joseph with thanks to Naomi Roberts All communications should be addressed to: The Editor, Fr Simon Gillespie The Presbytery, Halam Road, SOUTHWELL NG25 0AD 07760 372105 [email protected] Printed by Prime Group Berristow Lane, South Normanton, Alfreton DE55 2FH 01623 499949 [email protected] www.primegroup.co.uk Nottingham Diocesan Yearbook Page 1 Contents Addresses Deacons . page 28 Priests ................................................page 21 Polish Catholic Mission in England and Wales.................page 32 Communities of Consecrated Life...........................page 33 Secular Institutes and Secular Orders . .page 36 Academies and Schools .................................page 102 Apostolic Nunciature............................................page 3 Archbishops and Bishops in England and Wales......................page 3 Bishops of Nottingham since 1850.................................page 7 Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, CaTEW ...........page 5 Catholic Organisations and Societies.............................page 108 Celebration of Mass according to the 1962 Missal (Extraordinary Form)
    [Show full text]