171,978 research outputs found
Robert W. Pope Oral History Interview
An oral history interview with Robert W. Pope and Lawrence John Konrad, a gay retired couple. They spoke of their childhoods in Tallahassee (Pope) and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (Konrad), and how they met. They also spoke about the Johns Committee headed by Charley Johns. They talked about the AIDS crisis in the 1980s and how people reacted to both those with HIV/AIDS and gay men in general. They talk of forming a ministry for those dying of AIDS called SIDA and work with the Metropolitan Community Church. Konrad spoke about his time in the Navy and the difficulties of being a gay man in the service. They also talked about their various business enterprises over the years
An essay on man : being the first book of ethic epistles to H. St. John L. Bolingbroke
Enthält auch > essay on critism, written in the year MDCCIX[Alexander Pope] ; with the commentary and notes of W. Warburton A. M.Verfasser gemäss Halket
Robert W. Bob Pope and Lawrence Konrad Oral History Interview
In this interview, Robert W. Bob Pope and Lawrence Konrad recount their experiences as gay men living and growing up in the American South. In addition, Pope and Konrad describe their personal lives as both a couple and individuals, their own memories of major historical events such as the HIV/AIDs pandemic and the Vietnam War, and their long involvement in LGBTQ+ accepting religious communities
Envelope addressed to W. T. Johnson from R. J. Pope
Envelope addressed to W. T. Johnson from R. J. Pope, labeled Pictures from Rich Square
Pope Benedict XVI’s teaching of marital love
Ks. Mieczysław OzorowskiThe author is a synthesis of Benedict XVI’s teaching of marital love and his
care for its proper development. The Pope has stressed many times that love is
the greatest gift from God. Unfortunately, today the world rejects the biblical
image of love. Marital love is threatened by secularism promoting relativism,
divorces, homosexual relationships, contraception, abortion, pornography and
prostitution. Today’s liberal understanding of love is reduced to the sphere of
eros and is deprived of its spiritual dimension. The Pope calls marital love the
way of holiness that leads to a full and integral human and Christian development.
It is the way of mutual care, the way of the sacraments and prayer and the
way of work understood as a profession and involvement in domestic affairs.Wydział Studiów nad Rodziną UKSW w Warszawie12/1194
John W. and Nellie Pope
John W. and Nellie Beers Pope are pictured in a portrait togetther. They were married March 18,1901. John W. is the son of John W. and Charlotte Pope and died September 3, 1943. Nellie in the daughter of Franklin and Elizabeth Beers and she died June 26, 1932
Conceptualising and managing trade-offs in sustainability assessment
One of the defining characteristics of sustainability assessment as a form of impact assessment is that it provides a forum for the explicit consideration of the trade-offs that are inherent in complex decision-making processes. Few sustainability assessments have achieved this goal though, and none has considered trade-offs in a holistic fashion throughout the process. Recent contributions such as the Gibson trade-off rules have significantly progressed thinking in this area by suggesting appropriate acceptability criteria for evaluating substantive trade-offs arising from proposed development, as well as process rules for how evaluations of acceptability should occur. However, there has been negligible uptake of these rules in practice. Overall, we argue that there is inadequate consideration of trade-offs, both process and substantive, throughout the sustainability assessment process, and insufficient considerations of how process decisions and compromises influence substantive outcomes. This paper presents a framework for understanding and managing both process and substantive trade-offs within each step of a typical sustainability assessment process. The framework draws together previously published literature and offers case studies that illustrate aspects of the practical application of the framework. The framing and design of sustainability assessment are vitally important, as process compromises or trade-offs can have substantive consequences in terms of sustainability outcomes delivered, with the choice of alternatives considered being a particularly significant determinant of substantive outcomes. The demarcation of acceptable from unacceptable impacts is a key aspect of managing trade-offs. Offsets can be considered as a form of trade-off within a category of sustainability that are utilised to enhance preferred alternatives once conditions of impact acceptability have been met. In this way they may enable net gains to be delivered; another imperative for progress to sustainability. Understanding the nature and implications of trade-offs within sustainability assessment is essential to improving practice
Letter from W. T. Johnson to Doris C. Pope
Letter from W. T. Johnson to Doris C. Pope, concerning use of Hammocks Beach camp by the Girl Scouts
Letters of Pope Paul VI and pope John Paul II concerning the veneration of the virgin Mary: a study in ecumenical development
As seen from the outside, the Roman Catholic and the Orthodox Churches appear to have many things in common. Among these is the veneration of the Virgin Mary, which is part of their common heritage of over 1000 years, though the Orthodox would insist that there are important differences between Roman Catholic and Orthodox Mariology. Serious ecumenical contacts and discussions between the Church of Rome and other Churches have only begun in the last thirty to forty years, and this thesis examines letters of Pope Paul VI and John Paul II on Marian doctrine, written during the period of increasing communication The theme focuses on the ecumenical implication of these documents, as well as their change in emphasis on the part of the Papacy. From Pope John XXIII's first opening the doors to ecumenism, the Bishops of Rome have become progressively more interested in, or conscious of, the ecumenical implications of their statements on Mary. At the same time, there has been a considerable shift in interest on the part of the Papacy, changing from talking about the Western Churches, to a grand strategy which exercises an approach to the Orthodox Churches from their common heritage of the Virgin Mary
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