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Catholic Identity College Guide
NATIONAL CATHOLIC REGISTER, SEPTEMBER 7, 2014 C1 The Register’s 10th Annual CATHOLIC IDENTITY 2014 COLLEGE GUIDE C2 AQUINAS COLLEGE C2 THE AUGUSTINE INSTITUTE C2 AVE MARIA UNIVERSITY C2 BELMONT ABBEY COLLEGE C2 BENEDICTINE COLLEGE C2 CAMPION COLLEGE AUSTRALIA his National Catholic Register C4 THE CatHOLIC DIStaNCE UNIVERSITY resource is made possible through C4 THE CatHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERIca the cooperation of bishops, college C4 CHRISTENDOM COLLEGE T presidents, our benefactors and our C4 COLLEGE OF SAINT MARY advertisers. This year, 38 schools went on C4 COLLEGE OF ST. MARY MAGDALEN record in answer to these questions: C4 DESALES UNIVERSITY C4 DONNELLY COLLEGE C4 FRANCIScaN UNIVERSITY OF StEUBENVILLE C5 HOLY APOSTLES COLLEGE AND SEMINARY C5 HOLY CROSS COLLEGE C5 HOLY SPIRIT COLLEGE C5 INSTITUTE FOR THE PSYCHOLOGIcaL Text of the questionnaire we sent to Catholic colleges. ScIENCES C5 INTERNatIONAL THEOLOGIcaL 1. Did the president make the public “Profession of Faith” and INSTITUTe — sCHOOL OF catHOLIC take the “Oath of Fidelity”? THEOLOGY 2. Is the majority of the board of trustees Catholic? C5 PONTIFIcaL JOHN PaUL II INSTITUTE FOR STUDIES ON MARRIAGE AND FAMILY at 3. Is the majority of the faculty Catholic? THE catHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERIca 4. Do you publicly require all Catholic theology professors to have C6 JOHN PAUL THE GREat catHOLIC UNIVERSITY the mandatum? C6 LIVING WatER COLLEGE 5. Did all Catholic theology professors take the “Oath of OF THE ARTS Fidelity”? C6 MADONNA UNIVERSITY 6. Do you provide daily Mass and posted times (at least weekly) for C6 MARYVALE INSTITUTE individual confession? C6 mOUNT ST. MARy’S 7. -
The Geographical Analysis of Mormon Temple Sites in Utah
Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive Theses and Dissertations 1992 The Geographical Analysis of Mormon Temple Sites in Utah Garth R. Liston Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Geography Commons, and the Mormon Studies Commons BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Liston, Garth R., "The Geographical Analysis of Mormon Temple Sites in Utah" (1992). Theses and Dissertations. 4881. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/4881 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. 3 the geographicalgeograp c ananalysisysls 0off mormormonon tetempletempiepie slsitessltestes in utah A thesis presented to the department of geography brigham young university in partial fulfillment of the requiaequirequirementsrementscements for the degree master of science by garth R listenliston december 1992 this thesis by garth R liston is accepted in its present form by the department of geography of brigham young university as satisfying the thesis requirement for the degree of master of science f c- H L ricirichardard H jackson 1 committeeoommittee chair alan H grey committecommifctemeflermeymere er i w i ige-e&e date laieialeidleaaleig- J 6tevstevtpvnstldepartmentni d- epartmentepartment chair n dedication0 0 this thesis is dedicated to my wonderful mother -
FICE Code List for Colleges and Universities (X0011)
FICE Code List For Colleges And Universities ALABAMA ALASKA 001002 ALABAMA A & M 001061 ALASKA PACIFIC UNIVERSITY 001005 ALABAMA STATE UNIVERSITY 066659 PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND C.C. 001008 ATHENS STATE UNIVERSITY 011462 U OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE 008310 AUBURN U-MONTGOMERY 001063 U OF ALASKA FAIRBANKS 001009 AUBURN UNIVERSITY MAIN 001065 UNIV OF ALASKA SOUTHEAST 005733 BEVILL STATE C.C. 001012 BIRMINGHAM SOUTHERN COLL ARIZONA 001030 BISHOP STATE COMM COLLEGE 001081 ARIZONA STATE UNIV MAIN 001013 CALHOUN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 066935 ARIZONA STATE UNIV WEST 001007 CENTRAL ALABAMA COMM COLL 001071 ARIZONA WESTERN COLLEGE 002602 CHATTAHOOCHEE VALLEY 001072 COCHISE COLLEGE 012182 CHATTAHOOCHEE VALLEY 031004 COCONINO COUNTY COMM COLL 012308 COMM COLLEGE OF THE A.F. 008322 DEVRY UNIVERSITY 001015 ENTERPRISE STATE JR COLL 008246 DINE COLLEGE 001003 FAULKNER UNIVERSITY 008303 GATEWAY COMMUNITY COLLEGE 005699 G.WALLACE ST CC-SELMA 001076 GLENDALE COMMUNITY COLL 001017 GADSDEN STATE COMM COLL 001074 GRAND CANYON UNIVERSITY 001019 HUNTINGDON COLLEGE 001077 MESA COMMUNITY COLLEGE 001020 JACKSONVILLE STATE UNIV 011864 MOHAVE COMMUNITY COLLEGE 001021 JEFFERSON DAVIS COMM COLL 001082 NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIV 001022 JEFFERSON STATE COMM COLL 011862 NORTHLAND PIONEER COLLEGE 001023 JUDSON COLLEGE 026236 PARADISE VALLEY COMM COLL 001059 LAWSON STATE COMM COLLEGE 001078 PHOENIX COLLEGE 001026 MARION MILITARY INSTITUTE 007266 PIMA COUNTY COMMUNITY COL 001028 MILES COLLEGE 020653 PRESCOTT COLLEGE 001031 NORTHEAST ALABAMA COMM CO 021775 RIO SALADO COMMUNITY COLL 005697 NORTHWEST -
A Brief History of H
A Brief History of H. Tracy Hall’s Term as Bishop of the Pleasant View First Ward of the Sharon East Stake July 4, 1976-July 19, 1981 I was called to be the bishop of the Pleasant View First Ward (to succeed Bishop Rey L. Baird) by Sharon East Stake President Ernest L. Olsen on July 1, 1976. I was sustained, along with William T. Woolf, First Councilor, H. Reese Hansen, Second Councilor, and Raymond D. Harrison as my Executive Secretary, in Sacrament Meeting on the 200th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America, July 4, 1976. The meeting commenced at 3:00 p.m. in the lovely, rock-faced chapel located at 650 East, Stadium Avenue in Provo, Utah and concluded about one and one-half hours later. The previous ward clerk, Lamar Paxman, and his assistant clerks, Richard L. Larson, Jack V. Dixon, and Burthel B. Mayhew, were retained as my clerks. The first two weeks as bishop were frenetic. Twenty-two meetings were attended. Twenty persons were released from their church callings and 33 persons were called to serve. Youth interviews, temple recommend interviews, a marriage interview, a mission call, and counseling interviews together totaled 56! Additionally, there were five visits to ward members, three evenings working at the stake welfare farm in the Provo River Bottoms near the power plant, a sitting for a photograph of the new bishopric, planning for a young men’s super activity, and the “setting apart” of those newly called to serve. A “prayer circle” in the Relief Society room at 5:30 p.m. -
Lehi Historic Archive File Categories Achievements of Lehi Citizens
Lehi Historic Archive File Categories Achievements of Lehi Citizens AdobeLehi Plant Airplane Flights in Lehi Alex ChristoffersonChampion Wrestler Alex Loveridge Home All About Food and Fuel/Sinclair Allred Park Alma Peterson Construction/Kent Peterson Alpine Fireplaces Alpine School BoardThomas Powers Alpine School District Alpine Soil/Water Conservation District Alpine Stake Alpine Stake Tabernacle Alpine, Utah American Dream Labs American Football LeagueDick Felt (Titans/Patriots) American Fork Canyon American Fork Canyon Flour Mill American Fork Canyon Mining District American Fork Canyon Power Plant American Fork Cooperative Institution American Fork Hospital American Fork, Utah American Fork, UtahMayors American Fork, UtahSteel Days American Legion/Veterans American Legion/VeteransBoys State American Patriotic League American Red Cross Ancient Order of United Workmen (AOUW) Ancient Utah Fossils and Rock Art Andrew Fjeld Animal Life of Utah Annie Oakley Antiquities Act Arcade Dance Hall Arches National Park Arctic Circle Ashley and Virlie Nelson Home (153 West 200 North) Assembly Hall Athenian Club Auctus Club Aunt Libby’s Dog Cemetery Austin Brothers Companies AuthorFred Hardy AuthorJohn Rockwell, Historian AuthorKay Cox AuthorLinda Bethers: Christmas Orange AuthorLinda JefferiesPoet AuthorReg Christensen AuthorRichard Van Wagoner Auto Repair Shop2005 North Railroad Street Azer Southwick Home 90 South Center B&K Auto Parts Bank of American Fork Bates Service Station Bathhouses in Utah Beal Meat Packing Plant Bear -
Reasons for Building Tabernacles
Psi Sigma Siren Volume 4 Issue 1 Article 2 January 2006 Buildings at the Center: Reasons for Building Tabernacles Aaron McArthur University of Nevada, Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/psi_sigma_siren Part of the American Studies Commons, Cultural History Commons, History of Religion Commons, Political History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation McArthur, Aaron (2006) "Buildings at the Center: Reasons for Building Tabernacles," Psi Sigma Siren: Vol. 4 : Iss. 1 , Article 2. Available at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/psi_sigma_siren/vol4/iss1/2 This Article is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Article in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Article has been accepted for inclusion in Psi Sigma Siren by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CHAPTER 3 BUILDINGS AT THE CENTER Reasons for Building Tabernacles There were generally three different motivations for the construction of a tabernacle in a specific community. The first was that the leadership of the Church in Salt Lake directed communities to build one. Leaders did this in settlements that they believed were to become important central communities for gatherings and large meetings.1 The decision was also made in areas that the Church desired to strengthen their claim to, legally and emotionally. -
The Effect of the Rivalry Between Jesse Knight and Thomas Nicholls Taylor on Architecture in Provo, Utah: 1896-1915
Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive Theses and Dissertations 1991 The Effect of the Rivalry Between Jesse Knight and Thomas Nicholls Taylor on Architecture in Provo, Utah: 1896-1915 Stephen A. Hales Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Mormon Studies Commons, and the Urban, Community and Regional Planning Commons BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Hales, Stephen A., "The Effect of the Rivalry Between Jesse Knight and Thomas Nicholls Taylor on Architecture in Provo, Utah: 1896-1915" (1991). Theses and Dissertations. 4740. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/4740 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. LZ THE EFFECT OF THE RIVALRY BETWEEN JESSE KNIGHT AND THOMAS NICHOLLS TAYLOR ON architecture IN PROVO UTAH 189619151896 1915 A thesis presented to the department of art brigham young university in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree master of arts 0 stephen A hales 1991 by stephen A hales december 1991 this thesis by stephen A hales is accepted in its present form by the department of art of brigham young university as satisfying the thesis requirement for the degree master of arts i r rr f 1 C mark hamilton committee0amimmiweemee chilechair mark Johnjohndonjohnkonjohnmmitteekonoon committeec6mmittee -
Contents • Abbreviations • International Education Codes • Us Education Codes • Canadian Education Codes July 1, 2021
CONTENTS • ABBREVIATIONS • INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION CODES • US EDUCATION CODES • CANADIAN EDUCATION CODES JULY 1, 2021 ABBREVIATIONS FOR ABBREVIATIONS FOR ABBREVIATIONS FOR STATES, TERRITORIES STATES, TERRITORIES STATES, TERRITORIES AND CANADIAN AND CANADIAN AND CANADIAN PROVINCES PROVINCES PROVINCES AL ALABAMA OH OHIO AK ALASKA OK OKLAHOMA CANADA AS AMERICAN SAMOA OR OREGON AB ALBERTA AZ ARIZONA PA PENNSYLVANIA BC BRITISH COLUMBIA AR ARKANSAS PR PUERTO RICO MB MANITOBA CA CALIFORNIA RI RHODE ISLAND NB NEW BRUNSWICK CO COLORADO SC SOUTH CAROLINA NF NEWFOUNDLAND CT CONNECTICUT SD SOUTH DAKOTA NT NORTHWEST TERRITORIES DE DELAWARE TN TENNESSEE NS NOVA SCOTIA DC DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA TX TEXAS NU NUNAVUT FL FLORIDA UT UTAH ON ONTARIO GA GEORGIA VT VERMONT PE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND GU GUAM VI US Virgin Islands QC QUEBEC HI HAWAII VA VIRGINIA SK SASKATCHEWAN ID IDAHO WA WASHINGTON YT YUKON TERRITORY IL ILLINOIS WV WEST VIRGINIA IN INDIANA WI WISCONSIN IA IOWA WY WYOMING KS KANSAS KY KENTUCKY LA LOUISIANA ME MAINE MD MARYLAND MA MASSACHUSETTS MI MICHIGAN MN MINNESOTA MS MISSISSIPPI MO MISSOURI MT MONTANA NE NEBRASKA NV NEVADA NH NEW HAMPSHIRE NJ NEW JERSEY NM NEW MEXICO NY NEW YORK NC NORTH CAROLINA ND NORTH DAKOTA MP NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS JULY 1, 2021 INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION CODES International Education RN/PN International Education RN/PN AFGHANISTAN AF99F00000 CHILE CL99F00000 ALAND ISLANDS AX99F00000 CHINA CN99F00000 ALBANIA AL99F00000 CHRISTMAS ISLAND CX99F00000 ALGERIA DZ99F00000 COCOS (KEELING) ISLANDS CC99F00000 ANDORRA AD99F00000 COLOMBIA -
School Buses May Soon Sport Ads
Teens held for scare THE that shut down schools, page 4 Davis Local director returns Clipper to the past in new movie, page 9 75 CENTS VOL. 120 NO. 136 Chamber backs UDOT choice for West Davis CorridorINSIDE route, page 7 THURSDAY, MAY 30, 2013 TODAY’S CLIPPER HELPING DAVIS RESIDENTS Live Well SCHOOL BUSES may be a source of income for the Davis School District under a plan presented to the school board. Photo by Louise R. Shaw | Davis Clipper School buses may soon sport ads BY LOUISE R. SHAW FIRSTYEAROFIMPLEMENTATIONAND #LIPPER3TAFF7RITER BYTHEFOURTHYEAR AC CORDINGTO"RIAN,ARSEN DIRECTOR FARMINGTONu3CHOOL OFTRANSPORTATIONFORTHEDISTRICT BUSESIN$AVIS3CHOOL$ISTRICTMAY )N THE5TAH,EGISLATURE Home of the Braves BESPORTINGADVERTISEMENTSNEXT PASSED(" ALLOWINGADVERTIS Bountiful High’s soccer team take the 4A YEAR AFTERAPROPOSALMADETOTHE INGONSCHOOLBUSESTHROUGHOUTTHE state title with a 2-0 shutout. See page 21 SCHOOLBOARDINAWORKSHOPON STATE for the complete story. -AY 4HEDISTRICTESTABLISHEDGUIDE Photo by Jen Barnett | photo-jen-ics.com !DVERTISINGCOULDBRINGTHE DISTRICTASMUCHAS INITS ■ See “BUSES” p. 6 Bountiful buys 7.5 acres for park near high school BY REBECCA PALMER SAID#OUNCILMEMBER*OHN-ARC+NIGHT ACCORDINGTOREPORTSFROMCITYSTAFFERS 4HEPARKNEARESTTHEPLANNEDPARKIS7EST #LIPPER%DITOR q9OUDONpTJUSTGETTHEOPPORTUNITYTOPUR 4HEFUTUREPARKISLOCATEDON-ILL3TREET -UELLER0ARKAT3OUTHANDABOUT CHASETHISQUALITYOFLANDINTHEMIDDLEOF ATABOUT%AST)TWILLCOMEATACOSTOF %AST BOUNTIFULu4HE"OUNTIFUL#ITY "OUNTIFULr MILLION WHICHWILLCOMEFROMTHE#APITAL q"OUNTIFULDOESNpTHAVEMUCHUNDEVEL -
2014 Traverse Mountain Health Consultation (HC)
Health Consultation TRAVERSE MOUNTAIN: THALLIUM IN DRINKING WATER LEHI, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH Prepared by Utah Department of Health DECEMBER 3, 2014 Prepared under a Cooperative Agreement with the U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Division of Community Health Investigations Atlanta, Georgia 30333 Health Consultation: A Note of Explanation A health consultation is a verbal or written response from ATSDR or ATSDR’s Cooperative Agreement Partners to a specific request for information about health risks related to a specific site, a chemical release, or the presence of hazardous material. In order to prevent or mitigate exposures, a consultation may lead to specific actions, such as restricting use of or replacing water supplies; intensifying environmental sampling; restricting site access; or removing the contaminated material. In addition, consultations may recommend additional public health actions, such as conducting health surveillance activities to evaluate exposure or trends in adverse health outcomes; conducting biological indicators of exposure studies to assess exposure; and providing health education for health care providers and community members. This concludes the health consultation process for this site, unless additional information is obtained by ATSDR or ATSDR’s Cooperative Agreement Partner which, in the Agency’s opinion, indicates a need to revise or append the conclusions previously issued. You May Contact ATSDR Toll Free at 1-800-CDC-INFO or Visit our Home Page at: http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov HEALTH CONSULTATION TRAVERSE MOUNTAIN: THALLIUM IN DRINKING WATER LEHI, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH Prepared By: Environmental Epidemiology Program Office of Epidemiology Utah Department of Health Under a Cooperative Agreement with the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Traverse Mountain / Lehi, Utah Health Consultation TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................... -
Rediscovering Provo's First Tabernacle with Ground
Rediscovering Provo’s First Tabernacle with Ground-Penetrating Radar John H. McBride, Benjamin C. Pykles, Emily Utt, and R. William Keach II uring the early morning hours of December 17, 2010, fire broke out in Dthe Provo (Utah) Tabernacle, virtually gutting the historic building and leaving only the exterior walls standing in stable condition. On Octo- ber 1, 2011, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced that the ruined tabernacle will be restored as the second temple of the Church in Provo (the Provo City Center Temple), giving a second life to the tab- ernacle. However, this building is not the first tabernacle in Provo. Many years before the present tabernacle was constructed, the “Old Tabernacle” (or “Old Meeting House”) stood immediately north of the tabernacle that burned (figures 1 and 2) (in this article, we will refer to the Old Taber- nacle as the first tabernacle and the burned Provo Tabernacle as the second tabernacle). The first tabernacle was razed in 1919. Over time, this building and all associated structures disappeared from the surface of the site, replaced by open landscaping north of the second tabernacle, and the exact location of the old building was forgotten. Prior to the excavation of the first tabernacle site, the roots of a great sycamore tree had spread beneath an area once occupied by the north entrance of the first tabernacle. Underneath the tree’s towering branches, generations of picnickers have unfolded their blankets on the ground, little aware of the rich legacy buried there. Because the area of the first tabernacle will undergo extensive modifica- tion in preparation for the new Provo City Center Temple, it was critical to understand the location and character of the buried nineteenth-century structures in order to provide information that could be used to help plan the development. -
Donnelly College Faculty & Staff
TABLE OF CONTENTS Official Email Address ...................... 18 Peer-to-Peer Policy .......................... 18 Smoking Policy ................................ 18 About Donnelly College ............................ 3 Student Identification ....................... 18 Mission ............................................... 3 Visitors on Campus Policy ............... 18 Vision Statement ................................ 3 Voter Registration ............................ 19 Donnelly’s Values .............................. 3 Weapons Free Campus Policy ........ 19 Accreditation ...................................... 3 Academic Policies ................................... 20 Memberships ..................................... 4 Academic action............................... 20 Philosophy of General Education ...... 4 Academic Dishonesty ...................... 20 Academic Calendar 2018-2019 ................. 4 Admissions Policies ................................. 5 Academic Honors ............................ 21 Registration Procedures .................... 5 Academic Probation/Suspension .... 22 Admissions deadline .......................... 5 Attendance Policy ............................ 22 Transcripts for Admissions ................. 5 Changing Course Schedules ........... 22 Foreign Education Transcripts ........... 5 Class Cancellation ........................... 22 Placement Testing ............................. 5 Class Standing ................................. 22 Placement Policies ............................. 6 Course Audit ...................................