15/01/14 15:48:22 Page 1 of 1
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
Births, Marriages, and Deaths
DEC. 31, 1955 MEDICAL NEWS MEDICALBRrsIJOURNAL. 1631 Lead Glazes.-For some years now the pottery industry British Journal of Ophthalmology.-The new issue (Vol. 19, has been forbidden to use any but leadless or "low- No. 12) is now available. The contents include: solubility" glazes, because of the risk of lead poisoning. EXPERIENCE IN CLINIcAL EXAMINATION OP CORNEAL SENsITiVrry. CORNEAL SENSITIVITY AND THE NASO-LACRIMAL REFLEX AFTER RETROBULBAR However, in some teaching establishments raw lead glazes or ANAES rHESIA. Jorn Boberg-Ans. glazes containing a high percentage of soluble lead are still UVEITIS. A CLINICAL AND STATISTICAL SURVEY. George Bennett. INVESTIGATION OF THE CARBONIC ANHYDRASE CONTENT OF THE CORNEA OF used. The Ministry of Education has now issued a memo- THE RABBIT. J. Gloster. randum to local education authorities and school governors HYALURONIDASE IN OCULAR TISSUES. I. SENSITIVE BIOLOGICAL ASSAY FOR SMALL CONCENTRATIONS OF HYALURONIDASE. CT. Mayer. (No. 517, dated November 9, 1955) with the object of INCLUSION BODIES IN TRACHOMA. A. J. Dark. restricting the use of raw lead glazes in such schools. The TETRACYCLINE IN TRACHOMA. L. P. Agarwal and S. R. K. Malik. APPL IANCES: SIMPLE PUPILLOMETER. A. Arnaud Reid. memorandum also includes a list of precautions to be ob- LARGE CONCAVE MIRROR FOR INDIRECT OPHTHALMOSCOPY. H. Neame. served when handling potentially dangerous glazes. Issued monthly; annual subscription £4 4s.; single copy Awards for Research on Ageing.-Candidates wishing to 8s. 6d.; obtainable from the Publishing Manager, B.M.A. House, enter for the 1955-6 Ciba Foundation Awards for research Tavistock Square, London, W.C.1. -
The Original Lists of Persons of Quality, Emigrants, Religious Exiles, Political
Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924096785278 In compliance with current copyright law, Cornell University Library produced this replacement volume on paper that meets the ANSI Standard Z39.48-1992 to replace the irreparably deteriorated original. 2003 H^^r-h- CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE : ; rigmal ^ist0 OF PERSONS OF QUALITY; EMIGRANTS ; RELIGIOUS EXILES ; POLITICAL REBELS SERVING MEN SOLD FOR A TERM OF YEARS ; APPRENTICES CHILDREN STOLEN; MAIDENS PRESSED; AND OTHERS WHO WENT FROM GREAT BRITAIN TO THE AMERICAN PLANTATIONS 1600- I 700. WITH THEIR AGES, THE LOCALITIES WHERE THEY FORMERLY LIVED IN THE MOTHER COUNTRY, THE NAMES OF THE SHIPS IN WHICH THEY EMBARKED, AND OTHER INTERESTING PARTICULARS. FROM MSS. PRESERVED IN THE STATE PAPER DEPARTMENT OF HER MAJESTY'S PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE, ENGLAND. EDITED BY JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN. L n D n CHATTO AND WINDUS, PUBLISHERS. 1874, THE ORIGINAL LISTS. 1o ihi ^zmhcxs of the GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETIES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THIS COLLECTION OF THE NAMES OF THE EMIGRANT ANCESTORS OF MANY THOUSANDS OF AMERICAN FAMILIES, IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED PY THE EDITOR, JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN. CONTENTS. Register of the Names of all the Passengers from London during One Whole Year, ending Christmas, 1635 33, HS 1 the Ship Bonavatture via CONTENTS. In the Ship Defence.. E. Bostocke, Master 89, 91, 98, 99, 100, loi, 105, lo6 Blessing . -
The Trinity Review, May 1948
Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Trinity Publications (Newspapers, Yearbooks, Trinity Review (1939 - 1980) Catalogs, etc.) 5-1-1948 The Trinity Review, May 1948 Trinity College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/review Recommended Citation Trinity College, "The Trinity Review, May 1948" (1948). Trinity Review (1939 - 1980). 11. https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/review/11 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Trinity Publications (Newspapers, Yearbooks, Catalogs, etc.) at Trinity College Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Trinity Review (1939 - 1980) by an authorized administrator of Trinity College Digital Repository. The Trinity Review Volume II May, 1948 Number 3 EDITORIAL BOARD THOMAS C. F. LOWRY Editor-in-Chief HARRY M. BRACKEN F. ScoTT BILLYOU Executive Editor Business Manager STANLEY F. RODGERS GEORGE W. STOWE Art Editor Circulation Manager LEONARD c. OVERTON FRANK LAMBERT, }R. ]OHN w. COOTE RoBERT M. BLUM EDWARD R . PARONE ROBERT W. HERBERT APOLOGIA The third number of this volume of the Review is ap pearing on the wee~end designated by the college as com memorative of its one hundred and twenty-fifth anniversary. It is a happy coincidence that such a celebration should be in order at the time of the Review's evident emergence from the ran~s of embryonic underta~ings to those com prised of established and vital institutions. The newly instituted editorial board wishes at this time to pledge itself to the maintenance and furthering of the literary ideals so well defined by the previous editors. A special debt of gratitude is owed to Harold W. -
Scottish Episcopal Institute Journal
Scottish Episcopal Institute Journal Summer 2021 — Volume 5.2 A quarterly journal for debate on current issues in the Anglican Communion and beyond Scottish Episcopal Institute Journal Volume 5.2 — Summer 2021 — ISSN 2399-8989 ARTICLES Introduction to the Summer Issue on Scottish Episcopal Theologians Alison Peden 7 William Montgomery Watt and Islam Hugh Goddard 11 W. H. C. Frend and Donatism Jane Merdinger 25 Liberal Values under Threat? Vigo Demant’s The Religious Prospect 80 Years On Peter Selby 33 Donald MacKinnon’s Moral Philosophy in Context Andrew Bowyer 49 Oliver O’Donovan as Evangelical Theologian Andrew Errington 63 Some Scottish Episcopal Theologians and the Arts Ann Loades 75 Scottish Episcopal Theologians of Science Jaime Wright 91 Richard Holloway: Expectant Agnostic Ian Paton 101 SCOTTISH EPISCOPAL INSTITUTE JOURNAL 3 REVIEWS Ann Loades. Grace is not Faceless: Reflections on Mary Reviewed by Alison Jasper 116 Hannah Malcolm and Contributors. Words for a Dying World: Stories of Grief and Courage from the Global Church Reviewed by James Currall 119 David Fergusson and Mark W. Elliott, eds. The History of Scottish Theology, Volume I: Celtic Origins to Reformed Orthodoxy Reviewed by John Reuben Davies 121 Stephen Burns, Bryan Cones and James Tengatenga, eds. Twentieth Century Anglican Theologians: From Evelyn Underhill to Esther Mombo Reviewed by David Jasper 125 Nuria Calduch-Benages, Michael W. Duggan and Dalia Marx, eds. On Wings of Prayer: Sources of Jewish Worship Reviewed by Nicholas Taylor 127 Al Barrett and Ruth Harley. Being Interrupted: Reimagining the Church’s Mission from the Outside, In Reviewed by Lisa Curtice 128 AUTISM AND LITURGY A special request regarding a research project on autism and liturgy Dr Léon van Ommen needs your help for a research project on autism and liturgy. -
Recall of Mps
House of Commons Political and Constitutional Reform Committee Recall of MPs First Report of Session 2012–13 Report, together with formal minutes, oral and written evidence Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 21 June 2012 HC 373 [incorporating HC 1758-i-iv, Session 2010-12] Published on 28 June 2012 by authority of the House of Commons London: The Stationery Office Limited £0.00 The Political and Constitutional Reform Committee The Political and Constitutional Reform Committee is appointed by the House of Commons to consider political and constitutional reform. Current membership Mr Graham Allen MP (Labour, Nottingham North) (Chair) Mr Christopher Chope MP (Conservative, Christchurch) Paul Flynn MP (Labour, Newport West) Sheila Gilmore MP (Labour, Edinburgh East) Andrew Griffiths MP (Conservative, Burton) Fabian Hamilton MP (Labour, Leeds North East) Simon Hart MP (Conservative, Camarthen West and South Pembrokeshire) Tristram Hunt MP (Labour, Stoke on Trent Central) Mrs Eleanor Laing MP (Conservative, Epping Forest) Mr Andrew Turner MP (Conservative, Isle of Wight) Stephen Williams MP (Liberal Democrat, Bristol West) Powers The Committee’s powers are set out in House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in Temporary Standing Order (Political and Constitutional Reform Committee). These are available on the Internet via http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmstords.htm. Publication The Reports and evidence of the Committee are published by The Stationery Office by Order of the House. All publications of the Committee (including press notices) are on the internet at www.parliament.uk/pcrc. A list of Reports of the Committee in the present Parliament is at the back of this volume. -
Colby Alumnus Vol. 64, No. 2: Winter 1975
Colby College Digital Commons @ Colby Colby Alumnus Colby College Archives 1975 Colby Alumnus Vol. 64, No. 2: Winter 1975 Colby College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/alumnus Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Colby College, "Colby Alumnus Vol. 64, No. 2: Winter 1975" (1975). Colby Alumnus. 86. https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/alumnus/86 This Other is brought to you for free and open access by the Colby College Archives at Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Alumnus by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Colby. "") - -� � :O:-'-! . .. - ---� � ) =-.::-� -=---��-- ) :..:... • _ _I._ --�- -- - .. - - - . - .. ...:-.:.- .· :;:- . ... z· > - ' . they be regarded with an appropriate dignity, and The President's Page taken seriously, during the years of residence. The president of a prominent college in another part of the country wrote an article during some of the more difficult years on the campuses entitled "How to Sur vive Though Surrounded by Students," or something like that. His first and most important word of advice was "Listen to them." It did not take two Constitutional Conventions to convince most of us on the faculty and in the admin istration that students ought to be listened to. Let me enumerate some of the ways in which students are listened to at Colby, and let me emphasize that what they have to say is taken seriously. Each year two students are elected by their fellows to be representatives to the board of trustees. They do not vote, but neither do the two faculty representa tives. They do, however, have the full privilege of the floor, and they receive all the written materials and hear all the discussions that full voting trustees have FEW OBSERVATIONS ARE IN ORDER WITH REGARD TO access to. -
Denbury in the Great
Men of Denbury 1914-1918 Denbury Place and People the Great War Remember me when I am gone away, Gone far away into the silent land; When you can no more hold me by the hand, (Totnes Image Bank) Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay. Remember me when no more day by day You tell me of our future that you planned: Only remember me; you understand It will be late to counsel then or pray, Yet if you should forget me for a while And afterwards remember, do not grieve: For if the darkness and corruption leave A vestige of the thoughts that I once had, Better by far you should forget and smile Than that you should remember and be sad. Christina Rossetti The county of Devon was unusual, but not unique, in that not a single village survived the Great War without loss. Denbury deaths as a percentage of its population were amongst the highest in the land. My thanks go to the many Regiments, Museums, organisation, websites and private records that you have allowed me to research, copy and quote. Based on research carried out by Mick Sutherland-Cook 1 Men of Denbury 1914-1918 (IWM) Information supplied here is as accurate and complete as possible from the records available. Unfortunately, 70/80% of all WW1 service records were destroyed in the Blitz of WW2. If you have additional information on any of the men listed or any I may have omitted please let me know via [email protected] Introduction This publication is produced from the information gathered during my research into Denbury's contribution during the Great War 1914 – 1918 (and to 1922 when most Memorials were dedicated). -
Welsh Disestablishment: 'A Blessing in Disguise'
Welsh disestablishment: ‘A blessing in disguise’. David W. Jones The history of the protracted campaign to achieve Welsh disestablishment was to be characterised by a litany of broken pledges and frustrated attempts. It was also an exemplar of the ‘democratic deficit’ which has haunted Welsh politics. As Sir Henry Lewis1 declared in 1914: ‘The demand for disestablishment is a symptom of the times. It is the democracy that asks for it, not the Nonconformists. The demand is national, not denominational’.2 The Welsh Church Act in 1914 represented the outcome of the final, desperate scramble to cross the legislative line, oozing political compromise and equivocation in its wake. Even then, it would not have taken place without the fortuitous occurrence of constitutional change created by the Parliament Act 1911. This removed the obstacle of veto by the House of Lords, but still allowed for statutory delay. Lord Rosebery, the prime minister, had warned a Liberal meeting in Cardiff in 1895 that the Welsh demand for disestablishment faced a harsh democratic reality, in that: ‘it is hard for the representatives of the other 37 millions of population which are comprised in the United Kingdom to give first and the foremost place to a measure which affects only a million and a half’.3 But in case his audience were insufficiently disheartened by his homily, he added that there was: ‘another and more permanent barrier which opposes itself to your wishes in respect to Welsh Disestablishment’, being the intransigence of the House of Lords.4 The legislative delay which the Lords could invoke meant that the Welsh Church Bill was introduced to parliament on 23 April 1912, but it was not to be enacted until 18 September 1914. -
Proquest Dissertations
British Policy Towards Russian Refugees in the Aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution Elina Hannele Multanen Ph.D. Thesis The School of Slavonic and East European Studies University College London University of London ProQuest Number: U120850 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest. ProQuest U120850 Published by ProQuest LLC(2016). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 ABSTRACT This thesis examines British government policy towards Russian refugees in the aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution and the Civil War in Russia. As a consequence of these two events, approximately one million Russians opposing the Bolshevik rule escaped from Russia. The Russian refugee problem was one of the major political and humanitarian problems of inter-war Europe, affecting both individual countries of refuge, as well as the international community as a whole. The League of Nations had been formed in 1919 in order to promote international peace and security. The huge numbers of refugees from the former Russian Empire, on the other hand, were seen as a threat to the intemational stability. Consequently, the member states of the League for the first time recognised the need for intemational co-operative efforts to assist refugees, and the post of High Commissioner for Russian Refugees was established under the auspices of the League. -
{Download PDF} Leaving Alexandria: a Memoir Of
LEAVING ALEXANDRIA: A MEMOIR OF FAITH AND DOUBT PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Richard Holloway | 368 pages | 01 Mar 2012 | Canongate Books Ltd | 9780857860736 | English | Edinburgh, United Kingdom Leaving Alexandria: A Memoir of Faith and Doubt PDF Book The book is certainly thought-provoking. And what is God? As the coders might say, you'd be hard-put to read a more open-source account of a public and religious life. Apr 02, Rebecca rated it it was amazing Shelves: theology-religions , best-of , get-free-bookshop , memoirs , absolute- favorites. He was never able to come to a positive statement of belief, or trust and thus relied on the experience of an absence. The book has humour, lots of it, particularly when writing about sexuality and intimate human encounters. Aug 31, JanGlen rated it really liked it. The fundamental difficulty is that all religious systems and the claims they make for themselves are as fragile - and sometimes as beautiful - as the floating villages of the South China Sea. Want an ad-free experience? He glimpses some sort of something in the absence of what he previously thought of as present, but nothing can be formulated about that absence because the moment that is done one is in danger of forming some sort of dogma and by that, dread of dread one might become similar to an evangelical. Sort order. Worth reading, I think, because of who Holloway is and his influence on Anglicanism and his recent writings on morality without God which I am yet to read. The biggest source of division among Christians? On bended knee we must come and return to a past that never existed to pay homage. -
Orme) Wilberforce (Albert) Raymond Blackburn (Alexander Bell
Copyrights sought (Albert) Basil (Orme) Wilberforce (Albert) Raymond Blackburn (Alexander Bell) Filson Young (Alexander) Forbes Hendry (Alexander) Frederick Whyte (Alfred Hubert) Roy Fedden (Alfred) Alistair Cooke (Alfred) Guy Garrod (Alfred) James Hawkey (Archibald) Berkeley Milne (Archibald) David Stirling (Archibald) Havergal Downes-Shaw (Arthur) Berriedale Keith (Arthur) Beverley Baxter (Arthur) Cecil Tyrrell Beck (Arthur) Clive Morrison-Bell (Arthur) Hugh (Elsdale) Molson (Arthur) Mervyn Stockwood (Arthur) Paul Boissier, Harrow Heraldry Committee & Harrow School (Arthur) Trevor Dawson (Arwyn) Lynn Ungoed-Thomas (Basil Arthur) John Peto (Basil) Kingsley Martin (Basil) Kingsley Martin (Basil) Kingsley Martin & New Statesman (Borlasse Elward) Wyndham Childs (Cecil Frederick) Nevil Macready (Cecil George) Graham Hayman (Charles Edward) Howard Vincent (Charles Henry) Collins Baker (Charles) Alexander Harris (Charles) Cyril Clarke (Charles) Edgar Wood (Charles) Edward Troup (Charles) Frederick (Howard) Gough (Charles) Michael Duff (Charles) Philip Fothergill (Charles) Philip Fothergill, Liberal National Organisation, N-E Warwickshire Liberal Association & Rt Hon Charles Albert McCurdy (Charles) Vernon (Oldfield) Bartlett (Charles) Vernon (Oldfield) Bartlett & World Review of Reviews (Claude) Nigel (Byam) Davies (Claude) Nigel (Byam) Davies (Colin) Mark Patrick (Crwfurd) Wilfrid Griffin Eady (Cyril) Berkeley Ormerod (Cyril) Desmond Keeling (Cyril) George Toogood (Cyril) Kenneth Bird (David) Euan Wallace (Davies) Evan Bedford (Denis Duncan) -
CWO Challenging Institutional Sexism in the Roman Catholic Church E-News February 2015 Issue 77
CWO Challenging Institutional Sexism in the Roman Catholic Church E-news February 2015 issue 77 Welcome to the edited Febr uary is sue of the e -news. Editor Pat Brown. Please visit http://www.catholic-womens-ordination.org.uk/News and previous issues can be seen there. Please send items for March e-news by 20 March. info@catholic-womens- ordination.org.uk for further information about anything in this e-news where contact details are not given. Many thanks to Ruth Wood for proof reading the e-news. The next National Coordinating Group meeting is on 7 March at St Andrew’s Church, Short Street, Waterloo. We would like to invite all members to join us at 1.30pm for lunch followed at 2.00pm by a discussion about the CWO mission statement. If you are not a member of CWO, you can join here. http://www.catholic-womens- ordination.org.uk/contact.htm It would be useful if you could let me know whether you plan to attend this afternoon meeting [email protected] After the meeting, we will go for a drink and/or a meal at a local cafe Accompanying this e -news is a questionnaire from Catholic Women Speak About Catholic Women’s Reflections on the 2015 Synod on “The Vocation and Mission of the Family in the Church and Contemporary World” Feel free to share this on networks and other links, but please encourage respondents to exercise discretion in their responses to avoid a flood of irrelevant or trivial comments. 1 Vocations Sunday 26 April 2015 As discussed at our last Annual Gathering, we will hold 3 vigils on Vocation Sunday.