2010-10-31

St. Wolfgang of Regensburg (c. 924-994)

St. Wolfgang of Regensburg (c. 924-994)


Wolfgang was born in Swabia, Germany, and was educated at aschool located at the abbey of Reichenau. There he encountered Henry, a young noble who went on to become Archbishop of Trier. Meanwhile, Wolfgang remained in close contact with the archbishop, teaching in his cathedral school and supporting his efforts to reform the clergy.

At the death of the archbishop, Wolfgang chose to become a Benedictine monk and moved to an abbey in Einsiedeln, now part of Switzerland. Ordained a priest, he was appointed director of the monastery school there. Later he was sent to Hungary as a missionary, though his zeal and good will yielded limited results.

Emperor Otto II appointed him Bishop of Regensburg (near Munich). He immediately initiated reform of the clergy and of religious life, preaching with vigor and effectiveness and always demonstrating special concern for the poor. He wore the habit of a monk and lived an austere life.

The draw to monastic life never left him, including the desire for a life of solitude. At one point he left his diocese so that he could devote himself to prayer, but his responsibilities as bishop called him back.

In 994 he became ill while on a journey; he died in Puppingen near Linz, Austria. His feast day is celebrated widely in much of central Europe. He was canonized in 1052.

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2010-10-30

St. Alphonsus Rodriguez (c. 1533-1617)

St. Alphonsus Rodriguez (c. 1533-1617)


Tragedy and challenge beset today’s saint early in life, but Alphonsus Rodriguez found happiness and contentment through simple service and prayer.

Born in Spain in 1533, Alphonsus inherited the family textile business at 23. Within the space of three years, his wife, daughter and motherdied; meanwhile, business was poor. Alphonsus stepped back and reassessed his life. He sold the business and, with his young son, moved into his sisters’ home. There he learned the discipline of prayer and meditation.

Years later, at the death of his son, Alphonsus, almost 40 by then, sought to join the Jesuits. He was not helped by his poor education. He applied twice before being admitted. For 45 years he served as doorkeeperat the Jesuits’ college in Majorca. When not at his post, hewas almost always at prayer, though he often encountered difficulties and temptations.

His holiness and prayerfulness attracted many to him, including St. Peter Claver, then a Jesuit seminarian. Alphonsus’s life as doorkeeper may have been humdrum, but he caught the attention of poet and fellow-Jesuit Gerard Manley Hopkins, who made him the subject of one of his poems.

Alphonsus died in 1617. He is the patron saint of Majorca.

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Let the sleeping sleep..


"Do Not Meddle in the Affairs of Dragons...

For You are Crunchy and Taste Good With 

Ketchup."

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2010-10-28

travel

Why Did Baby Jesus Go to Jerusalem?

A catechist asked her class why Joseph and Mary took Jesus with them to Jerusalem.

A small child replied, “They couldn’t get a baby-sitter?”

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dia de los muertos

 
YOU'RE INVITED: Friday, November 5, 6–7:30 pm

Join us at the Olympic Sculpture Park for a special celebration of el Día de los muertos (the Day of the Dead). Festivities will include music, art making, food and more! We will be joined by the artists who created the annual tapete display and Banda Gozona!


Please click here to RSVP. This event is FREE!

Partial support for el Día de los Muertos is provided by the Consulate of Mexico in Seattle .

Date: 11/5/2010
Time: 6–7:30 pm
Location: 2901 Western Avenue, Seattle WA 98101

Illustration by Jesus Mena

Copyright © 2010 Seattle Art Museum. All Rights Reserved.

 

 

 
 
 
 


Posted via email from Seattle area live music

Dezeenmail #61

 
Dezeen - design magazine

issue #61 28/10/10

Mail
 
 

Hello Dezeenmail subscribers!

We're pleased to announce we've now launched Dezeen Watch Store online - scroll down for more details or visit the store here.

Meanwhile this issue of Dezeenmail is packed with our pick of the best stories and comments from Dezeen, plus new competitions and an update from Dezeenjobs on the right as always. 

 

We’ve just launched our online watch store at www.dezeenwatchstore.com. The store specialises in watches by named designers and boutique brands, and our collection will grow over the coming months. Click here to visit the store!

Kicking off with our most popular story this issue, readers are jealous of the pupils at this academy built over a running track in south London by Zaha Hadid. Read the story and comments »

Readers weren't too impressed with the first results from Austin Houldsworth's fossilisation machine, but Jeff was encouraging: "Don't worry, you'll fossilize a human one day!" Read the story and comments »

Lots of praise for these chains suspended under the missing dome of a Belgian church by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh. "Pure elegance" says the flickrfade. Read the story and comments »

Lots of compliments for this research centre on a Portuguese island by Aires Mateus Architects, but nobody really understands what it's for. Read the story and comments »

Initial excitement gives way to disappointment over this transparent phone by Tokujin Yoshioka. Read the story and comments »

There's no doubt New York studio Nemaworkshop grabbed your attention with this coffeeshop designed to resemble a library turned on its side, but most readers agree it would have been better with real books.  Read the story and comments »

Once again the 15 metre cantilever of MVRDV's Balancing Barn in the English countryside is hotly debated. Read the story and comments »

Readers are hung up on the complications of cleaning all the aluminium fins inside Davidclovers' latest house in Hong Kong. Read the story and comments »

Is BIG's completed figure-of-eight residential development in Copenhagen all that their slick presentations promised? Read the story and comments »

Readers are perhaps not as conflicted as designer Nelly Ben Hayoun hoped when it comes to how they'd handle a volcano in their living room. Read the story and comments »

More enthusiasm for this pleated facade on a Seoul clothing store by Universal Design Studio. Read the story and comments »

Bye for now!

 

Love Marcus, Rupinder, Rose, Brad, Ian and our lovely intern Laura.

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Posted via email from Seattle area live music

logical THOUGHTSl PLEASE PASS TO STEWART DUPEN THIS MIGHT SOUND CRAZY BUT IF THIS IS RIGHT!!!!

1145 PM SENT 

1896 Summer Olympics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from First modern Olympics)
Games of the I Olympiad
Athens 1896 report cover.jpg
Host cityAthens
Greece Nations participating14[1] Athletes participating241[2] Events43 in 9 sports Opening ceremonyApril 6 Closing ceremonyApril 15 Officially opened byKing George I of Greece Stadium Panathinaiko Stadium

The 1896 Summer Olympics, officially known as theGames of the I Olympiad, was a multi-sport eventcelebrated in AthensGreece, from April 6 to April 15, 1896. It was the first international Olympic Games held in the Modern eraAncient Greece was the birthplace of the Olympic Games, consequently Athens was perceived to be an appropriate choice to stage the inaugural modern Games. It was unanimously chosen as the host city during a congress organized by Pierre de Coubertin, a Frenchpedagogue and historian, in Paris, on June 23, 1894. TheInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) was also established during this congress.


Calamine is a historic name for an ore of zinc. The name calamine was derived from the Belgian town of Kelmis, whose French name is "La Calamine", which is home to a zinc mine. In the 18th and 19th century large ore mines could be found near the German village of Breinigerberg.


During the late 18th century it was discovered that what had been thought to be one ore was actually two distinct minerals:

IS THERE ENOUGH EXTRA O2 TO EFFECT SKIN GROWTH AND RATE TRADING ENERGY   OF SOLAR FOR O2 OPEN AND EASY IONIC AND VALANCE LEVELS TO BOND INTO NEW PROTEINS.

AND WHAT IS THE LARGEST ORGAN IN THE BODY THE SKIN.

 SUGGEST TRYING A TREATMENT OF ANAEROBIC EXERCISE AND POSSIBLY

 SKIN PAINTING WITH A LOW LEVEL O2 BLOCKER OR EXTENDED SESSIONS IN A PRESSURE CHAMBER ON A HELIOXGEN MIXTURE AROUND 90/10 REMOVING THE SKINS ABILITY TO PROCESS EXTRA O2

1242
 BUT MIGHTY MEEAN IT COULD BE TREATED WITH OF ALL THINGS A MUD BATH,

nEXT hiv AND PROTEIN MARKERS. mEAS THAT SOMEWHERE IN THE BODY THE PROTEINS ARE BEING MADE.

AND THERE IS A CHANCE SO OFTEN THESE PROTEINS ATTACH TO T-CELLS.
a CHEMICAL BONDING NOT NECESSARY A LIFE FORM.

iT COULD BE A WASTE BY PRODUCT OF ANOTHER PROBLEM THAT WOULD MAKE YOU MORE SUPPECTAPLE TO INFECTION BUT DOESN'T GRETLY ALTTER THE BLOOD CHEMISTRY. FILM i JUST WATCHED NEARLY SAID IT. i THINK BE CAUSE OF THE EFFECTS POPPERS HAS OR HAD AT ENHANCING THE PROBBLEM THE REAL CULPRIT IS FOR SOME REASON THE SKIN IS PROCESSING EXCESS o2 INTO A VARIATIONOF THE VITAMINS A AND D, AND BURNING UP MORE c THAN NORMAL. MAKING THE VITAMINS AND SOLAR ENGERY A FUEL FO THE CHANGE IN SKIN BEING ATTACJ BY A VIRUS, OR THE PROTEINS TIGER THE O2 BURN. NOW WEE IS THE FIRST SOURCE NOW BLLOOD TO BLOOD. EARLY CASES PROBABLY WERE VERY SICK TO BBEGIN WITH. AND THE ABILIITY  TO MAKE THE PROTIENS SHORT TERM TO BODY SEEMMED GOOD PROCESSING MORE O2 AEROBIICS!!!yIPPIE. iF fact poss  a side efffect of olympic training near the poor and the sick that started it as a posion for the athlete it was no rsik in the 40's 50's 60s lets see the modern Olympics started when.... under lying CAUSE WORLD TRAVEL. SKIN PROCESSSING MORE DILATION OF  PORES INCREASED BLOOD EXCHANGE RATES.
LOOPS A ROUND A FEW TIMES..IN THE REALLY SICK 

MAYBE A O2 BLOCKING CREAM NOT ZINCOXIDE ????

WHEN DID ZINICOXIDE FIRST COME INTO USE???  i HAVE TO LOOK IT UP ANY BETS THE FIRST OF THE NEW OLYMPIC GAMES???
 

Posted via email from scottyr's posterous

logical THOUGHTSl PLEASE PASS TO STEWART DUPEN THIS MIGHT SOUND CRAZY BUT IF THIS IS RIGHT!!!!

1145 PM SENT 

1896 Summer Olympics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from First modern Olympics)
Games of the I Olympiad
Athens 1896 report cover.jpg
Host cityAthens
Greece Nations participating14[1] Athletes participating241[2] Events43 in 9 sports Opening ceremonyApril 6 Closing ceremonyApril 15 Officially opened byKing George I of Greece Stadium Panathinaiko Stadium

The 1896 Summer Olympics, officially known as theGames of the I Olympiad, was a multi-sport eventcelebrated in AthensGreece, from April 6 to April 15, 1896. It was the first international Olympic Games held in the Modern eraAncient Greece was the birthplace of the Olympic Games, consequently Athens was perceived to be an appropriate choice to stage the inaugural modern Games. It was unanimously chosen as the host city during a congress organized by Pierre de Coubertin, a Frenchpedagogue and historian, in Paris, on June 23, 1894. TheInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) was also established during this congress.


Calamine is a historic name for an ore of zinc. The name calamine was derived from the Belgian town of Kelmis, whose French name is "La Calamine", which is home to a zinc mine. In the 18th and 19th century large ore mines could be found near the German village of Breinigerberg.


During the late 18th century it was discovered that what had been thought to be one ore was actually two distinct minerals:

IS THERE ENOUGH EXTRA O2 TO EFFECT SKIN GROWTH AND RATE TRADING ENERGY   OF SOLAR FOR O2 OPEN AND EASY IONIC AND VALANCE LEVELS TO BOND INTO NEW PROTEINS.

AND WHAT IS THE LARGEST ORGAN IN THE BODY THE SKIN.

 SUGGEST TRYING A TREATMENT OF ANAEROBIC EXERCISE AND POSSIBLY

 SKIN PAINTING WITH A LOW LEVEL O2 BLOCKER OR EXTENDED SESSIONS IN A PRESSURE CHAMBER ON A HELIOXGEN MIXTURE AROUND 90/10 REMOVING THE SKINS ABILITY TO PROCESS EXTRA O2

1242
 BUT MIGHTY MEEAN IT COULD BE TREATED WITH OF ALL THINGS A MUD BATH,

nEXT hiv AND PROTEIN MARKERS. mEAS THAT SOMEWHERE IN THE BODY THE PROTEINS ARE BEING MADE.

AND THERE IS A CHANCE SO OFTEN THESE PROTEINS ATTACH TO T-CELLS.
a CHEMICAL BONDING NOT NECESSARY A LIFE FORM.

iT COULD BE A WASTE BY PRODUCT OF ANOTHER PROBLEM THAT WOULD MAKE YOU MORE SUPPECTAPLE TO INFECTION BUT DOESN'T GRETLY ALTTER THE BLOOD CHEMISTRY. FILM i JUST WATCHED NEARLY SAID IT. i THINK BE CAUSE OF THE EFFECTS POPPERS HAS OR HAD AT ENHANCING THE PROBBLEM THE REAL CULPRIT IS FOR SOME REASON THE SKIN IS PROCESSING EXCESS o2 INTO A VARIATIONOF THE VITAMINS A AND D, AND BURNING UP MORE c THAN NORMAL. MAKING THE VITAMINS AND SOLAR ENGERY A FUEL FO THE CHANGE IN SKIN BEING ATTACJ BY A VIRUS, OR THE PROTEINS TIGER THE O2 BURN. NOW WEE IS THE FIRST SOURCE NOW BLLOOD TO BLOOD. EARLY CASES PROBABLY WERE VERY SICK TO BBEGIN WITH. AND THE ABILIITY  TO MAKE THE PROTIENS SHORT TERM TO BODY SEEMMED GOOD PROCESSING MORE O2 AEROBIICS!!!yIPPIE. iF fact poss  a side efffect of olympic training near the poor and the sick that started it as a posion for the athlete it was no rsik in the 40's 50's 60s lets see the modern Olympics started when.... under lying CAUSE WORLD TRAVEL. SKIN PROCESSSING MORE DILATION OF  PORES INCREASED BLOOD EXCHANGE RATES.
LOOPS A ROUND A FEW TIMES..IN THE REALLY SICK 

MAYBE A O2 BLOCKING CREAM NOT ZINCOXIDE ????

WHEN DID ZINICOXIDE FIRST COME INTO USE???  i HAVE TO LOOK IT UP ANY BETS THE FIRST OF THE NEW OLYMPIC GAMES???
 

Posted via email from scottyr's posterous

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