June 27, 1963 Catholic Church

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

June 27, 1963 Catholic Church Seton Hall University eRepository @ Seton Hall The aC tholic Advocate Archives and Special Collections 6-27-1963 The Advocate - June 27, 1963 Catholic Church Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate Part of the Catholic Studies Commons, and the Missions and World Christianity Commons Pope Paul’s Coronation on June 30; Council, Unity Move to Be Continued VATICAN CITY - Pops Paul Vl—the new successor to St. Peter as head of tha Church—promised a continua- tion of the Second Vatican Council and of the late Pope John’s quest for unity and peace in hit first address to the world. The former Giovanni Bat- tista Cardinal Montini, Arch- The Advocate bishop of Milan and for 20 years a close confidant of Vol. No. 12. 27 THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 10 1963 PRICE: CENTS Othar Stories, Comment Centerfold Insert - Pages 2,3, 6 Five New Pope Pius XII, will receive the of triple tiara the papacy Sunday evening, June 30 The Parishes coronation will take place on tlie Commemoration of St. Paul and follows by one day the Feast of SS Peter and Formed Paul, the great papal feast. THE CEREMONY will NEWARK - Archbishop B<v be land this week announced the held outdoors, in front of St. creation of five new PRAYS FOR POPE Poul his head Peter's Basilic#, beginning at parishes JOHN-Pope VI bows in prayer for his distinguished fi tn the Archdiocese of New- predecessor, John XXIII. On p m.—when Rome's summer his second day as Pontiff, Pope Paul visited Pope John's ark. two at them tn Hudson heat has abated. tomb in a grotto beneath St. Peter's Basilica. County, two In Essex and the According to first reports, fifth the m Union. He also ap- coronation ceremony will pointed pastors for four of the be "simplifiedm other new parishes and named ad- Masses Listed in word*, shorter than the nor- nte ministrators for two estab Newark, mal that has often re- lulled quired parishes In Union City six hours and Newark. One source indicated that it Rev. George A. O'Goroian. Paterson was possible that the place- ment assistant at All Saint*, Coronation of the crown Jersey for triple upon City, was named pastor of Our Pope Paul's head might be Roland and Bish- ON RECEIYING news of the performed Lady of Fatima, North Ber- Archbishop men! of the Archdiocese of on the outer bal- Navagh Rev. op have scheduled election of Giovanni Cardinal of gen. Edward F Wojty- Milan, the largest in the cony St. Peter’s Basilica. Masses at the cathedrals tn Moo Uni as at cha. assistant at St Vincent's. Supreme Pontiff, world." This was done the corona- Newark and Paterton to mark Roland issued the tion Bayonne, is the pastor at Our Archbishop Archbishop Roland sent a of Pope John XXIII. the election and coronation ot fallowing statement Earl I-ady of Mercy. Jersey City. cable to Amlrto Cardinal Cic- Warren, U S Chief Jus- Paul VI. These Pope tice. and Sen are the first new par- ognam, papal Secretary of Mike Mans- Boland rele- ishes in 33 Archbishop will field of Montana Hudson County m Texts of letters. Pope 2 State, congratulating the new Senate Ma- brale a Solemn Pontifical jority Leader, have been year* Pope and pledging the fealty nam- Mass at Sacred llesrt Cathe ed President of himself and the people of by Kennedy to dral on "We with the THE PARLSH at St Thomas July I at 7 30 p m rejoice entire head U the archdiocese the S ' legation at has the world upon More, He invited clergy, re- the election of Car- Caldwell Township, hat the coronation ligious and laity of the arch- dinal Montini a* the successor BISHOP NAVAGH. been placed tn the hands of in a let of Rev diocese to attend the beloved John XXIIi' ter to of the POPE George P Hretko. as- priests diocese, PAt I ; romised that Cardinal as- Mootmi. who hat said "We all rejoice a! the the sistant at St Andrew’s. West- ecumenu< ouncil begun BISHOP NAY YGH will pre sumed the name of Paul VI, wood The of The announcement . that Cardinal by Pope Joh- will he "the parish Holy tide and preach at Solemn a a man tt of eminent rapabili Montini has been chosen Union, will be guided as preeminent fa: of our Spirit. Mss* at the Cathedral of St pon- ly. an eipenrneed diplomat, a our new lie is Rev D Pope » holy tificate" Hr -o by George Drexler, John at i pledged tn the Baptist 10 30 a m administrator, wise and a and a wise a fa- assistant at St. Jer- pries!. true "continue u every effort" Joseph s. on June 30. the actual day of Christ like shepherd of souls, ther and God City pastor has been the work fr- hnsUan sey Pope Paul's coronation in unity at manifested his The fifth in govern very good to Hi* Church." (ContiaiKd new Ptnsh it St. Rome n Page 2) Thomas Aquinas. Newark, Both Ordinaries hava also which ha* had mission statu* requested that Masses be since Its establishment In 1954 teid in parishes throughout First Rev- Audience Tt McCabe Prilf it pas- their sees ah wrnhHp- Tutsan Papal tor. has given permission few an Mew. Michael A. Paine, mi- evening Mess to be held, pro- FRIENDS Ortiz minutra tor of St Rocco's, MEET-Marguerite was one of many children personally greeted by viding that it start no later Newark, hat named * Bishop as ho attended tho first annual Son been ad- than m The Mas* be For Navagh Juan festival for the Spanish- p may Priests ministrator of St Anthony's, said at any time the Diplomats, June 23 at Eastside field, within speaking High Paterson. (Another picture, story on 20.) Page Union City, and Rev. An- octave of the coronation VATICAN CITY - nunuato G. Cresrenti. as.su- Navagh <NC> 1-uigi Cardinal Rlshop ha* ordered Traglia, pro- Holy Fa' rr declared lant Madonna Pope Paul VI has at Della Libera, that Masses in Paterson dio- again pro- vicar geheral of Rome. West New mised to work for and York, will cesan parishes be held the peace Pope Paul noted •TROMBLY NO age but Call replace on that "the told , him as adminutrator of of a group of priWu that first title the either Archbishop St. day coronation 100. has of our mission and prr»ev nature Bishop He, by the more Rocco's. granted modem work! has of our or by r- <*i uted permission for tn authority is that of be- intention, has The need for their mission than “ been ’ Archbishop also an evening Mast. ing Bishop of Rome He add * r. vmncally alien and age need 32 In any previous contra to the transfers of assis- addition. Bishop Navagh rd that “the splendor of sanct- > priesthood and Ban tant and Pope Paul spoke tn diplo- and iti rtlig.ous Prayer pastors revealed as- ordered that church hetls h# ity the wraith of religious mission," he said 'Regrettable mats accredited signments for the 34 the hour of to the traditions “At thi priests rung at coronation, Holy for which Rome is vame tune, no age but ordained last See and the pastors of Rome NEWARK month. One of that sermons be preached on first and the world ours hii shown itself so need- Archbishop Bo- the trend of the U>t unique tn 25 year*, that the vast ma- June 24 the first official historically the assistants transferred the at all churches in fascinate* and ful. and should land and but it papacy on stirs our spir- say. more Bishop Navagh botfi nevertheless U (rinomr jority of Americans in those Rev, John P. June 30 audiences of hit reign. it." used the Egan of SL end that the prayer susceptible opening a great term “regrettable” became of its further capitula- days did not so understand it, Francis of Sate*. Lodi, who for the be inserted all The continued; “We before us. as it were as they joined other religious tion to teculantm Pope in SPEAKING TO Pope hope and that such an the diplo understanding will the arehdmeetan Masses for a month know the to the of leaders this week criticism join mis- starting religious life of Rome pastoral assistance in ‘‘During these day* of grave would have resulted mats. Pope Paul pledged to in refusal sion June 21 of the June m Honduras on fairly well since we M good and zealous pnests . 17 Supreme Court crisis when all our citizens Tegucigalpa. continue seeking “on spent by the states to the Con- peace decision ratify years of our here. “Not indeed that other banning authorued the four of truth, jus- priesthood stitution. FATHER O'GORMAN pillars Is a *nd knew countless and func- prayer and Bible reading in tice. love and lie since we her most vocations "The decision liberty." re- Another is regretta- native of who schools. Page 4 Jersey City, worthy and dear people, most tions of the Church of God public story, ble for ferred to John XXlU's its effect upon Ameri- served with distinction Pope The great Early Deadline pious holy should be over or for- Archbishop said that peace Pacem in places and tradi- passed can educational is ** encyclical, policy. It an World tions the decision Army chaplain in so rich tn regal gotten Certainly not And not was 'not sur- Tern*, and stressed the splen- arc being called upon to tragic for American youth.
Recommended publications
  • Albuquerque Morning Journal, 01-28-1922 Journal Publishing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 1-28-1922 Albuquerque Morning Journal, 01-28-1922 Journal Publishing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_mj_news Recommended Citation Journal Publishing Company. "Albuquerque Morning Journal, 01-28-1922." (1922). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ abq_mj_news/460 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CITY CITY EDITION ALBUQUEI UE EDITION xjbnal:II Da or Mull. Hoc a l OlITV-S- I OM) YKAll 1922. j by Carrier Month VOI;. CI.XXII. No. U8. Albuquerque, New Mexico, Saturday, January 28, Single oplc,. 5o INCORPORA TION OF LABOR Romance o U. S. Girl That ACGEPTAKGE C00LI00E SAYS THE G. 0. ? UNIONS RECOMMENDED Angered Hohenzollerns Elided HEfJRYFORD'S IS mm away' Pittsburgh. Ta., Jan. 27. TE (Special.) Poverty poverty due MUSCLE SHOALS WORLO'S B Y COMMITTEE OF SENA to the war has killed the romance of pretty and vivacious Nancy Duchess of I.eishman and the Croy. Ad- There comes from rans the news OFFER IS URGED Accomplishments of the ILL that the duchess is suing the duke ministration Are Reviewed REGULATION OF FINAL VOTE 0 5 POWERS If for divorce, and that what was long considered one of the prettiest By Vice President in In- lovu atiiiiis ot the tune has oeen National Agricultural Confer- ii m shattered.
    [Show full text]
  • Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 2014
    This event is dedicated to the Filipino People on the occasion of the five- day pastoral and state visit of Pope Francis here in the Philippines on October 23 to 27, 2014 part of 22- day Asian and Oceanian tour from October 22 to November 13, 2014. Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 ―Mercy and Compassion‖ a Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 2014 Contents About the project ............................................................................................... 2 About the Theme of the Apostolic Visit: ‗Mercy and Compassion‘.................................. 4 History of Jesus is Lord Church Worldwide.............................................................................. 6 Executive Branch of the Philippines ....................................................................... 15 Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines ....................................................................... 15 Vice Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines .............................................................. 16 Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines ............................................ 16 Presidents of the Senate of the Philippines .......................................................................... 17 Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines ...................................................... 17 Leaders of the Roman Catholic Church ................................................................ 18 Pope (Roman Catholic Bishop of Rome and Worldwide Leader of Roman
    [Show full text]
  • Elegy with Epic Consequences: Elegiac Themes in Statius' Thebaid
    Elegy with Epic Consequences: Elegiac Themes in Statius’ Thebaid A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Cincinnati in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In the Department of Classics of the College of Arts and Sciences by Carina Moss B.A. Bucknell University April 2020 Committee Chairs: Lauren D. Ginsberg, Ph.D., Kathryn J. Gutzwiller, Ph.D. Abstract This dissertation examines the role of elegy in the Thebaid by Statius, from allusion at the level of words or phrases to broad thematic resonance. It argues that Statius attributes elegiac language and themes to characters throughout the epic, especially women. Statius thus activates certain women in the epic as disruptors, emphasizing the ideological conflict between the genres of Latin love elegy and epic poetry. While previous scholarship has emphasized the importance of Statius’ epic predecessors, or the prominence of tragic allusion in the plot, my dissertation centers the role of elegy in this epic. First, I argue that Statius relies on allusion to the genre of elegy to signal the true divine agent of the civil war at Thebes: Vulcan. Vulcan’s erotic jealousy over Venus’ affair with Mars leads him to create the Necklace of Harmonia. Imbued with elegiac resonance, the necklace comes to Argia with corrupted elegiac imagery. Statius characterizes Argia within the dynamic of the elegiac relicta puella and uses this framework to explain Argia’s gift of the necklace to Eriphyle and her advocacy for Argos’ involvement in the war. By observing the full weight of the elegiac imagery in these scenes, I show that Argia mistakenly causes the death of Polynices and the devastation at Thebes as the result of Vulcan’s elegiac curse.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rite of Sodomy
    The Rite of Sodomy volume iii i Books by Randy Engel Sex Education—The Final Plague The McHugh Chronicles— Who Betrayed the Prolife Movement? ii The Rite of Sodomy Homosexuality and the Roman Catholic Church volume iii AmChurch and the Homosexual Revolution Randy Engel NEW ENGEL PUBLISHING Export, Pennsylvania iii Copyright © 2012 by Randy Engel All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, New Engel Publishing, Box 356, Export, PA 15632 Library of Congress Control Number 2010916845 Includes complete index ISBN 978-0-9778601-7-3 NEW ENGEL PUBLISHING Box 356 Export, PA 15632 www.newengelpublishing.com iv Dedication To Monsignor Charles T. Moss 1930–2006 Beloved Pastor of St. Roch’s Parish Forever Our Lady’s Champion v vi INTRODUCTION Contents AmChurch and the Homosexual Revolution ............................................. 507 X AmChurch—Posing a Historic Framework .................... 509 1 Bishop Carroll and the Roots of the American Church .... 509 2 The Rise of Traditionalism ................................. 516 3 The Americanist Revolution Quietly Simmers ............ 519 4 Americanism in the Age of Gibbons ........................ 525 5 Pope Leo XIII—The Iron Fist in the Velvet Glove ......... 529 6 Pope Saint Pius X Attacks Modernism ..................... 534 7 Modernism Not Dead— Just Resting ...................... 538 XI The Bishops’ Bureaucracy and the Homosexual Revolution ... 549 1 National Catholic War Council—A Crack in the Dam ...... 549 2 Transition From Warfare to Welfare ........................ 551 3 Vatican II and the Shaping of AmChurch ................ 561 4 The Politics of the New Progressivism .................... 563 5 The Homosexual Colonization of the NCCB/USCC .......
    [Show full text]
  • The Christian Brothers in Tasmania: a Portrait 1911-1988
    THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS IN TASMANIA: A PORTRAIT 1911-1988 by SEAN T. McMANUS B.A., Dip.T. Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Humanities at the University of Tasmania. February 1996 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The writer wishes to acknowledge the following people for their invaluable assistance and support during the preparation of this thesis: * Professor Austin Gough for his enduring patience, advice and encouragement as supervisor. * Professor Michael Roe for his forbearance and consideration. * Brothers associated with the Christian Brothers' Archives in Parkville, Victoria and Balmain NSW : Linus Kelty for his advice and depth of knowledge about the Brothers in Tasmania and elsewhere, Eamon O'Brien for helping Linus Kelty compile lists of entrants to the Brothers' Australian Juniorates, Ed O'Donnell and Bill Greening. *Tony Le Clerc for sharing the fruits of his research on Archbishop Murphy in the Catholic Archives at the University of Tasmania. *Sr. Carmel Hall at the Tasmanian Catholic Museum and Archives, Mt. St Canice, Sandy Bay. *Various Christian Brothers who provided first hand accounts of their time in Tasmania, especially Jack Higgins who was a willing point of reference and check for accuracy. *The Superiors of the Launceston and Hobart Brothers' Communities who let me have an extended loan of. the House Annals and the Flood Diary. *Kevin Delaney for encouragement in slow moments. *Robert Zehmeister for advice on technical difficulties. *Peter McManus and Jack Higgins for proof-reading. *The Christian Brothers of the Moonah Community, Peter and Mary McManus, and Brendan and Simone McManus, who at various times provided space in which to undertake and complete this thesis.
    [Show full text]
  • UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara Military Achievement And
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara Military Achievement and Late-Republican Aristocratic Values, 81-49 BCE. A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Classics by Noah A.S. Segal Committee in charge: Professor Robert Morstein-Marx, Chair Professor Dorota Dutsch Professor Elizabeth Depalma Digeser Professor Nathan Rosenstein June, 2019 The dissertation of Noah A.S. Segal is approved. ____________________________________________ Prof. Nathan Rosenstein ____________________________________________ Prof. Dorota Dutsch _____________________________________________ Prof. Elizabeth Depalma Digeser ____________________________________________ Prof. Robert Morstein-Marx, Committee Chair May, 2019 Military Achievement and Late-Republican Aristocratic Values, 81-49 BCE. Copyright © 2019 by Noah A.S. Segal iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS While I have, like most graduate students, began many boasts (and some laments) with the word’s “my dissertation,” as I write these acknowledgements I am overwhelmed with gratitude to the many people who were instrumental to this project. The merits of this work truly belong to them as well. To begin with, my dissertation committee was blessed with – to use a sports metaphor – a “dream team” of scholars: Beth Depalma Digeser, Dorota Dutsch, Nathan Rosenstein, and Robert Morstein-Marx. In their comments and in their classrooms each of these excellent people far exceeded the traditional expectations of readers and educators. Anything excellent about this project is a direct result of their involvement, and I am forever grateful to each of them for their incredible patience, compassion, and encouragement. I owe to Robert Morstein-Marx, the supervisor of this dissertation, more thanks and praise than I am permitted to include here. There is, I have found, a false belief in some corners of academia that brilliance and humanity are often incompatible in dissertation superviors.
    [Show full text]
  • Zlo a Irl L ^R
    .f = 4 -zlo a Irl l ^r ( CITY OF SUPPLIANTS Ashley and Peter Larkin Series in Greek and Roman Culture BY ANGELIKI TZANETOU UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS Austin Copyright 2012 by the University of Texas Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America First edition, 2012 Requests for permission to reproduce material from this work should be sent to: Permissions University of Texas Press P.O. Box 7819 Austin, TX 78713-7819 utpress.utexas.edu/about/book-permissions O The paper used in this book meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (R1997) (Permanence of Paper). LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Tzanetou, Angeliki City of suppliants : tragedy and the Athenian empire / by Angeliki Tzanetou. - First edition. p. cm. - (Ashley and Peter Larkin series in Greek and Roman culture) ISBN 978-0-292-75432-4 I. Greek drama (Tragedy)-History and criticism. 2. Aeschylus. Eumenides. 3. Euripides. Children of Heracles. 4. Sophocles. Oedipus at Colonus. I. Title. II. Series : Ashley and Peter Larkin series in Greek and Roman culture. PA3131.T96 2012 882'.oI09-dc23 2012007466 First paperback printing, 2013 For Philip and Orestes CONTENTS LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS IX ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Xiii INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER I AESCHYLUS' EUMENIDES: HEGEMONY AND JUSTICE 31 CHAPTER 2 HEGEMONY AND EMPIRE: PRESUMED ORIGINS 67 CHAPTER 3 EURIPIDES' CHILDREN OF HERACLES: HELPING THE WEAK AND PUNISHING THE STRONG 73 CHAPTER 4 HEGEMONY IN CRISIS: SOPHOCLES' OEDIPUS AT COLONUS 105 CONCLUSION 129 NOTES 133 BIBLIOGRAPHY 173 INDEX LOCORUM 191 GENERAL INDEX 20I vii ABBREVIATIONS 'he list of authors and works follows the abbreviations in Liddel-Scott's Greek English Lexicon; the journals are abbreviated following the Annee Philologique.
    [Show full text]
  • Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team
    Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER Biological Control ASSESSING HOST RANGES FOR PARASITOIDS AND PREDATORS USED FOR CLASSICAL BIOLOGICAL CONTROL: A GUIDE TO BEST PRACTICE R. G. Van Driesche, T. Murray, and R. Reardon (Eds.) Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team—Morgantown, West Virginia United States Forest FHTET-2004-03 Department of Service September 2004 Agriculture he Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team (FHTET) was created in 1995 Tby the Deputy Chief for State and Private Forestry, USDA, Forest Service, to develop and deliver technologies to protect and improve the health of American forests. This book was published by FHTET as part of the technology transfer series. http://www.fs.fed.us/foresthealth/technology/ Cover photo: Syngaster lepidus Brullè—Timothy Paine, University of California, Riverside. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at 202-720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, Whitten Building, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call 202-720-5964 (voice and TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. The use of trade, firm, or corporation names in this publication is for information only and does not constitute an endorsement by the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ears of Hermes
    The Ears of Hermes The Ears of Hermes Communication, Images, and Identity in the Classical World Maurizio Bettini Translated by William Michael Short THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY PRess • COLUMBUS Copyright © 2000 Giulio Einaudi editore S.p.A. All rights reserved. English translation published 2011 by The Ohio State University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bettini, Maurizio. [Le orecchie di Hermes. English.] The ears of Hermes : communication, images, and identity in the classical world / Maurizio Bettini ; translated by William Michael Short. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8142-1170-0 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8142-1170-4 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-13: 978-0-8142-9271-6 (cd-rom) 1. Classical literature—History and criticism. 2. Literature and anthropology—Greece. 3. Literature and anthropology—Rome. 4. Hermes (Greek deity) in literature. I. Short, William Michael, 1977– II. Title. PA3009.B4813 2011 937—dc23 2011015908 This book is available in the following editions: Cloth (ISBN 978-0-8142-1170-0) CD-ROM (ISBN 978-0-8142-9271-6) Cover design by AuthorSupport.com Text design by Juliet Williams Type set in Adobe Garamond Pro Printed by Thomson-Shore, Inc. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American Na- tional Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48–1992. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 CONTENTS Translator’s Preface vii Author’s Preface and Acknowledgments xi Part 1. Mythology Chapter 1 Hermes’ Ears: Places and Symbols of Communication in Ancient Culture 3 Chapter 2 Brutus the Fool 40 Part 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion
    Kernos Revue internationale et pluridisciplinaire de religion grecque antique 8 | 1995 Varia Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion Angelos Chaniotis and Eftychia Stavrianopoulou Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/kernos/605 DOI: 10.4000/kernos.605 ISSN: 2034-7871 Publisher Centre international d'étude de la religion grecque antique Printed version Date of publication: 1 January 1995 Number of pages: 205-266 ISSN: 0776-3824 Electronic reference Angelos Chaniotis and Eftychia Stavrianopoulou, « Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion », Kernos [Online], 8 | 1995, Online since 11 April 2011, connection on 16 September 2020. URL : http:// journals.openedition.org/kernos/605 Kernos Kernos, 8 (1995), p, 205-266. EpigrapWc Bulletin for Greek Religion 1991 (EBGR) This fifth issue of BEGR presents the publications of 1991 along with several addenda to BEGR 1987-1990. The division of the work between New York and Heidelberg, for the first time this year, caused certain logistical prablems, which can be seen in several gaps; some publications of 1991 could not be considered for this issue and will be included in the next BEGR, together with the publications of 1992. We are optimistic that in the future we will be able to accelerate the presentation of epigraphic publications. The principles explained in Kernos, 4 (991), p. 287-288 and Kernos, 7 (994), p. 287 apply also to this issue, The abbreviations used are those of L'Année Philologique and the Supplementum Bpigraphicum Graecum. We remind our readers that the bulletin is not a general bibliography on Greek religion; works devoted exclusively to religious matters (marked here with an asterisk) are presented very briefly, even if they make extensive use of inscriptions, In exceptional cases (see n° 87) we include in our bulletin studies on the Linear B tablets.
    [Show full text]
  • ISSUE 7 JUNE 2017 Veritas: June 2017 1 Welcome Back
    ISSUE 7 JUNE 2017 veritas: june 2017 1 Welcome back The 2017 edition of Veritas allows Dominic College to again connect with our Old Scholars. We hope Old Scholars continue to hold a sense of belonging to their alma mater. It has been 70 years since classes first commenced on site here at Glenorchy under Salesian patronage and we now have thousands of former students who were once part of our school community, living and working both near and far across the globe. We hope that all of you are enjoying life to the full. With the advent of seven decades, there is a deep sense now in the College of our past and the origins of our traditions. Those who attended our school as Savio College, Holy Name Convent or as Boys’ Town hold unique experiences and memories of the school in that time and place. This is indeed reflected in Veritas. When a school develops as an amalgamation of schools, as we have at Dominic College, a rich and diverse history can be shared, recognising that our lives were shaped and have unfolded in varied and interesting ways. Our development makes us a unique educational endeavour in Tasmania, a school community of which we can all be proud. Beth Gilligan, Principal Dominic College 2 veritas: june 2017 Our newest old scholars: the Class of 2016 Year 10 students celebrated their graduation in a series of ceremonies, culminating in the traditional formal leaver’s dinner at Wrest Point. Dominic College Principal, Ms Beth Gilligan, said the class of 2016 had been characterised by their tireless outreach to the poor and disadvantaged, their great love of our Dominic family and their enthusiasm for our community.
    [Show full text]
  • St Patrick's Church Hill, Sydney
    Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society Volume 39 2018 Sydney, Central Australia and the West: fields of Catholic endeavour St Patrick’s Church Hill, Sydney 1 Australian Catholic Historical Society Contacts General Correspondence, including membership applications and renewals, should be addressed to The Secretary ACHS PO Box A621 Sydney South, NSW, 1235 Enquiries may also be directed to: [email protected] http://australiancatholichistoricalsociety.com.au/ Executive members of the Society President: Dr John Carmody Vice Presidents: Prof James Franklin Mr Howard Murray Secretary: Ms Helen Scanlon Treasurer: Dr Lesley Hughes ACHS Chaplain: Sr Helen Simpson Cover image: St Patrick’s Church Hill. Sydney Photograph by Gerry Nolan, 31 January 2019 See article page 93 The ACHS meets monthly in the crypt of St Patrick’s 2 Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society JACHS ISSN: 0084-7259 ACHS 2018 soft cover ISBN: 978-1-925872-47-7 ACHS 2018 hard cover ISBN: 978-1-925872-48-4 ACHS 2018 epub ISBN: 978-1-925872-49-1 ACHS 2018 pdf ISBN: 978-1-925872-50-7 Editor: James Franklin Published by ATF Press Publishing Group under its ATF Theology imprint Editorial control and subscriptions remain with the Australian Catholic Historical Society 1 Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society vol 39 2018 Contents Edmund Campion, Archdeacon John McEncroe: An architect of the Australian Church. 4 Colin Fowler, Lewis Harding, catechist at Norfolk Island penal settlement 1838–1842 ..................................... 13 Graeme Pender, The life and contribution of Bishop Charles Henry Davis OSB (1815–1854) to the Catholic Church in Australia .......29 Odhran O’Brien, Beyond Melbourne: Nineteenth-century cathedral building in the Diocese of Perth ............................
    [Show full text]