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         Father Ryan:     more books (109)
  1. Father Ryan- the poet-priest of the South by Kate White, 1919
  2. Personal memories of Father Ryan,: The southern poet-priest by M. E Henry-Ruffin, 1899
  3. RYAN, FATHER JOHN A.: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of the Great Depression</i> by BENTLEY ANDERSON, 2004
  4. FATHER RYAN'S POEMS: Patriotic, Religious, Miscellaneous. by Father Abram J. Ryan., 1905
  5. POEMS: PATRIOTIC, RELIGIOUS, MISCELLANEOUS / CONTAINING HIS POSTHUMOUS POEMS by Abram J. (Father Ryan) Ryan, 1896-01-01
  6. Poems: Patriotic, Religious by Abram Joseph Ryan, 2009
  7. The Bishop and the Three Kings Andrew M. Greeley (Author)The Bishop and the Three Kings (A Father Blackie Ryan Mystery) [1998 MASS MARKET PAPERBACK] Andrew M. Greeley (Author) The Bishop and the Three Kings by Andrew M. Greeley (Author), 1998
  8. Address of Michael J. Ryan, esq., at the commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary of the death of Commodore Barry, father of the American navy by Michael J Ryan, 1903
  9. Happy are Those Who Thirst for Justice (A Father Blackie Ryan Mystery) by Andrew M. Greeley, 1988-01-01
  10. The Bishop and The Missing L Train (A Father Blackie Ryan Mystery) by Andrew M. Greeley, 2001-01-01
  11. Catholic Digest January 1993 (Back Issue Magazine) (Volume 57 Number 3)
  12. Catholic Digest February 1993 (Back Issue Magazine) (Volume 57 Number 4)
  13. My Life With Tiberius: A Father's Adventures With His Down Syndrome Son by John T. Ryan, 2008-05-16
  14. His Father's Son (The Lassiter Law) (Silhouette Intimate Moments, 1147) (Intimate Moments, 1147) by Ruth Ryan Langan, 2002-05-01

81. General Information - Father Ryan High School
Father Ryan High School General Information, FRHS Football 2002 Website,http//www.fatherryan.org. Nickname, Fightin Irish
http://www.tnsuper7.com/geninfo-fatherryan.htm
TENNESSEE'S SUPER 7 ATHLETIC CONFERENCE Schools Baylor Brentwood Academy Briarcrest Christian Christian Brothers Father Ryan McCallie Memphis University School Montgomery Bell Academy Father Ryan High School
General Information Location 700 Norwood Drive, Nashville, TN 37204 Phone Website http://www.fatherryan.org Nickname Fightin' Irish Headmaster John J. Langton Head Coach Bruce Lussier 2004 Record Enrollment Composition Coed (Grades 9-12) Championships State Champs in 1974, '97 Links 2005 Schedule

82. Classroom
Father Ryan’s personal family was joining the Confederate cause and his Father Ryan took over parishes in Tennessee and spent a good deal of time in
http://www.tennesseehistory.com/class/Abrams.htm
TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES
Father Abram Ryan
The 18-year-old priest started his career as a teacher at Niagara University and soon returned to his beloved Missouri where he taught theology at the diocesan seminary in Cape Girardeau, MO. and remained close to his family.
Father Ryan also gained a reputation as an Angel of Mercy among the Confederate soldiers he served and many noted he had no fear of death. In the heat of some of the heaviest fighting, Father Ryan knowingly risked his own life on numerous occasions retrieving wounded soldiers and evacuating them to safety. As the war moved forward, news soon reached him that his younger brother had been killed in action in Kentucky. Father Ryan was grief-stricken, and in an effort to deal with the tragedy, penned a poem that was eventually published in a Southern newspaper. The words were such that they gripped people across the region and began earning the young Priest the nickname "Poet-Priest of the Confederacy".
Father Ryan took over parishes in Tennessee and spent a good deal of time in Nashville, Clarksville and other communities in the region helping to repair and reestablish the churches damaged by the war. His reputation as a priest continued to grow and earned him a respect from Tennesseans reserved for few religious leaders.

83. Seattle University - News And Events - University News
Known to his parishioners as Mike, Father Ryan has been pastor of St. James Father Ryan will celebrate Mass in the Seattle University Chapel of St.
http://www.seattleu.edu/home/news_events/news/news_detail.asp?elYear=1999&elID=5

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85. Pope John Paul II Album
Read Father Ryan s homily for Friday here. Saturday, April 2, 2005 Read FatherRyan s homily in its entirety here. Sunday, April 3, 2005
http://www.stjames-cathedral.org/liturgy/jp2/jp2album.htm
In Memory of Pope John Paul II
Please be patient... photos may take a few moments to download.
Friday, April 1: Vigil for the Holy Father

Saturday, April 2: News of the Pope's Death

Sunday, April 3: Remembering Pope John Paul II

Monday, April 4: Mass with Archbishop Brunett
...
Place of Prayer for the Holy Father
Friday, April 1, 2005
As the Holy Father neared death, we kept vigil in the Cathedral until Midnight. Read Father Ryan's homily for Friday here.
Saturday, April 2, 2005
Shortly after Noon, we receive word of the Pope's death. Black and purple banners are hung while the Cathedral's great bell is tolled.
On Saturday evening , more than a thousand gather in the Cathedral for Mass and a candlelight vigil. " Dear friends, our Church stands at a new and uncertain moment as we mourn the loss of an extraordinary Pope, a Pope who for more than a generation has defined the papacy, a Pope who in many ways has been larger than life," Father Ryan said in his homily. "He became the conscience of both Church and world as he crisscrossed the globe courageously calling people to a higher and a deeper morality... we do stand at a new and uncertain moment as a Church but we do not stand alone. The same Lord who inspired the earliest Christian believers to the heights of holiness and who elicited from fearful, doubting Thomas a dazzling act of faith is with us now and will be with us until the end of time. We are not alone."

86. Conclusion Of Centennial Week
In the sacristy, Father Ryan welcomes Father William Gallagher, former pastor Father Ryan and Father Gallagher. Together they represent more than thirty
http://www.stjames-cathedral.org/history/nov2004/conclusion.htm
In the sacristy, Father Ryan welcomes Father William Gallagher, former pastor of St. James Cathedral, and Father Jim Johnson, former sacristan, to the Centennial celebration. Other concelebrants were Father David Brant, Father Richard Ward, and Father Joseph Ostopowich, pastor of the Ukrainian Rite community at St. James Cathedral Parish. Archbishop Brunett presided at the Mass.
Archbishop Brunett preaches to the Cathedral community. " We thank God on this feast of Christ the King that for one hundred years this Cathedral of St. James has faithfully served ... the people of this Archdiocese, and the people of this region in the name of the gospel. It has been a wonderful history of seeing and celebrating and living out our Christian identity. In God’s name, we will continue to do this. We will promote the welfare of those to whom we are sent. We will continue to serve each human person in God’s name. We will do our part to ensure that all people experience God’s plan for humanity: a future full of hope." Read the full text of Archbishop Brunett's remarks here.

87. The Church Calls Father Ryan Scott A Fake Priest By EA Torriero
His followers know him as Father Ryan St. Anne Scott, bishop of the independent Holy Father Ryan works within the context of an independent order,
http://www.unitypublishing.com/NewReligiousMovements/FatherBrianScott.htm
The Church Calls Father Ryan Scott a Fake Priest
By E.A. Torriero
Tribune staff reporter
Published February 6, 2005 His followers know him as Father Ryan St. Anne Scott, bishop of the independent Holy Rosary Abbey, currently housed in a converted home for the mentally ill in this western Illinois city.
For more than 15 years, the gregarious Scottdivorced and a convicted felonhas moved his troubled abbey around the Midwest, drawing small bands of disenchanted, mostly elderly, Catholics who long for the Latin mass of their youth.
But time after time, Scott and his followers have parted acrimoniously after battling over property, money and theology. Roman Catholic officials in at least four states have publicly warned that Scott is not a legitimate priest and that the baptisms, weddings, funerals and other ceremonies he conducts are not sanctioned by the church.
Those warnings are now being echoed by the Peoria diocese, which has advised Roman Catholics in western and central Illinois not to attend mass or receive sacraments or counseling from Scott.
Raised a Methodist, Scott says he converted to Catholicism and was ordained in 1993 by a breakaway Catholic movement and later officially became a Roman Catholic priest.

88. Diocese Of Grand Island - At The Heart Of Nebraska
In 1864, Father MJ Ryan offered Mass once a month in homes and railroad section Under Father Ryan the first church was built in 1869 on land given by
http://www.gidiocese.org/cathedral/beginnings.php
Beginnings of a Parish Hall County was established by an act of the legislature in 1855 and was organized in 1859. That same year, Patrick Moore and his brother, Richard, came from Iowa City, Iowa to be the first Catholic families in Hall County. They immediately sought help from the bishop in Omaha. However, it wasn't until 1861 that the first priest, Father Almire Fairmont, a Frenchman, came to visit the Hall County parishioners. Father Fairmont celebrated the first Mass in the Moore's log cabin in the fall of that year, 3 miles west of what is now the town of Wood River. Moore's house was the home of the Rev. Anthony Moore, the first priest ordained from Hall County. About the same time that the Moores settled, the Windolph families, also Catholics, arrived in Grand Island. Priests from Columbus or Omaha then came to the Grand Island and Wood River area once a year to confer the sacraments and celebrate Mass. In 1864, Father M. J. Ryan offered Mass once a month in homes and railroad section houses. With the railroad coming to the county, the parishioners felt a church to be necessary. Under Father Ryan the first church was built in 1869 on land given by Union Pacific. The land was located at First and Elm streets, where the parish center now stands. Sadly, due to a windstorm, the church was destroyed before its dedication. This was a great shock to the young mission and its members. A second attempt to build a church was halted in 1873 by an economic depression.

89. Vanderbilt Children's Hospital : Press Room
Father Ryan Student Council donates books to JLFRC The idea came from FatherRyan science teacher Phyllis Adgent, who also happens to volunteer at the
http://www.vanderbiltchildrens.com/interior.php?mid=139&press_id=150

90. Fall02_HumbleBeginnings
“Father Ryan had to step in and simmer the whole thing down. Father Ryan’sinfluence on Niland was probably as great as on anyone.
http://www.lemoyne.edu/communications/LeM_Magazine/LeMmag_F02Humble.html
Coach Niland strategizes with the basketball team during a timeout. The Rev. Vincent B. Ryan, S.J.
From Humble Beginnings to Historic Highs
By Carol L. Boll
State Fair Coliseum and other nearby sites for practice and home games. The baseball team would make Griffin Field in Liverpool its home away from home. But some things would remain unchanged.
Thomas J. Niland Jr.
First basketball coach dispensed lessons for life They talk about the man: his integrity, his work ethic, and, above all, his fierce commitment to the well-being and moral development of his students. One suspects Niland would want it no other way. A native of Tonawanda, N.Y., Niland was pursuing his degree in business administration at Canisius when World War II intervened and he put his studies on hold. As a paratrooper in the 101st Airborne Division, he participated in the invasion of Normandy, the airborne drop over Holland, and the battle of Bastogne, for which he would receive the Silver Star for gallantry and the Purple Heart for wounds suffered. He returned to Canisius where, in spite of an arm wounded with shrapnel, he would excel on the basketball court and captain the team for the remaining two years. He graduated in 1947. Niland came to Le Moyne that fall to spearhead the new athletics program. As the lone coach at a college with no gymnasium or playing fields of its own, he faced a daunting task. But, he would say in a 1990 interview with the Syracuse Post-Standard, the lack of facilities in those early years never bothered him.

91. THE PAULIST FATHERS // MISSION // ECUMENISM
In addition to Father Ryan, and as a continuation of the Paulist Fathers ecumenicalefforts, Paulist Ron Roberson, works as associate director for
http://www.paulist.org/mission/ecumenism.html
The Paulists initiated the third millennium by moving with the times, opening a Paulist North American Office for Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations in New York City. This office is headed by Fr. Thomas Ryan. Fr. Ryan works with Paulist ministry centers in the U.S. and Canada helping them to envision fresh initiatives for both Christian unity and interreligious understanding and collaboration. "We are sent by Jesus to work for unity among Christians, Father Ryan says, not because we belong to a particular church, but because we belong to Jesus who prayed, ‘Father, may they all be one, as you are in me, and I am in you, so that the world may believe that you sent me (John 17: 21)’. "To follow Jesus means to participate in his work: his prayer and work become our own. To be a Christian in the Catholic tradition means to be ecumenical, to carry an active concern for the unity of the body of Christ, the Church." In addition to Father Ryan, and as a continuation of the Paulist Fathers ecumenical efforts, Paulist Ron Roberson, works as associate director for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops where he focuses on relations with the various Christian Oriental and Orthodox Churches in America.

92. Houston Public Library || Centennial 1904-2004
Father Ryan FOUNTAIN. Donated by The Robert E. Lee Chapter of the United One verse of Father Ryan’s poem “The Conquered Banner”, is carved below the
http://www.houstonlibrary.org/hpl/centennial/gallery.html
ver the years, the library has acquired an extensive collection of books, photographs, portraits, sculpture and machines.
Some items are part of the library's archives and special collections, while others are located at various branches and at the central library where they add a sense of charm and posterity to their locations.
The items on this page are from the Julia Ideson Building and the Norma Meldrum Children's Room at the Central Library. JULIA IDESON.
Portrait painted by Houston artist, Julien Muench, in 1934. Purchased from Mr. Muench with donations from friends of Julia Ideson after her death. Chairman of the purchasing committee was Mrs. Hardie Robinson. Miss Ideson was Librarian of The Houston Public Library from 1903 to 1945. In 1951, the central library was named The Julia Ideson Building in her honor. FATHER RYAN FOUNTAIN
Donated by The Robert E. Lee Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1932 as memorial to Father Abram Joseph Ryan (1839-1886) poet-patriot of the Confederacy. The fountain was designed by Mrs. Penelope Lingan, Houston artist, It is made of rich cream marble trimmed with red Verona marble.

93. Ryan
From an ambulance squad I learned that Father Ryan was administering to the Father Ryan s name was on the lips of every soldier in Bragg s army and it
http://crusader.bac.edu/library/rarebooks/Ryanfiles/essay2.htm
Fr. Abram J. Ryan Archive
home

........Essay: Poetics, Politics, and the Fr. Abram J. Ryan Archive
photos

letters

poems

articles
...
editions
Fr. Ryan’s life (1838-1886) and literary reputation became entangled in the complex knot of issues and emotions that surrounded the fate of the Confederacy. For the whole of his career, Fr. Ryan was principally known as the "Poet-Priest of the South." By contrast, poets of late 19th century New England enjoyed a relatively genteel support system, backed by Ivy League scholarship. While the South had its own early bastions of literary tradition, from Charleston to Chapel Hill, the evils of slavery and the travails of civil war seem for a time to have made poetry subservient to politics, scholarship subordinate to survival. Even by the time of Fr. Ryan's death, no college or university had been formally designated to house the poet's papers and shepherd his literary reputation. Despite this, Fr. Ryan's readership has persisted. Now, more than a century after his death, the poet-priest's most famous poem, "The Conquered Banner," has re-entered public discourse through political debate over controversial decisions to fly or not fly the Confederate flag over southern state capitols. Partisans on both sides have invoked Fr. Ryan in support of their positions. A leader of the faction to fly the flag in South Carolina credited a reading of "The Conquered Banner" with having stirred his passion to spearhead the political cause. By contrast, Wallace K. Tomlinson, an Associate Dean at Tulane University, wrote to the New Orleans Clarion-Herald (a Catholic newspaper) on June 7, 2001, pointedly quoting some of the many lines from Ryan's poem that clearly called for the flag to be furled, not flown.

94. Articles
Memories of Father Ryan An Old friend Father Ryan s Poems publicationnotice for the Baltimore edition of Ryan s collection
http://crusader.bac.edu/library/rarebooks/Ryanfiles/Artlist.htm
Fr. Abram J. Ryan Archive
home

essay

photos

letters
... "Rev. Abraham Ryan was Native of U.S."
[clipping describes discovery of Ryan's baptismal record] "When Father Ryan, the Poet-Priest..."
[clipping summarizes Ryan's wartime role, especially at Fredericksburg VA] "Two Soldiers: An Incident of the Battle of Lookout Mountain"
[eyewitness account describes Ryan as wartime chaplain] "The Late Poet-Priest"
[clipping describes a postwar meeting between Ryan and Jefferson Davis] "Horrors of the Fever"
[excerpt describes the yellow fever epidemic with lines from Ryan's poetry] "The Conquered Banner"
[clipping gives Ryan's account of how his most famous poem came to be written] "An Afternoon in the Sunny South" [article describes publication of Ryan's first collection of poems in Mobile, Alabama.] "Memories of Father Ryan: An Old friend..." [article recounts Nellie Henry's claim of authorship of the poem Reunited "Father Ryan's Poems" [publication notice for the Baltimore edition of Ryan's collection] ""To All Whom It May Concern"" [text of Bishop Quinlan's notice of Fr. Ryan's writing sojourn in Biloxi] "Lecture On Nature and Super-Nature" [admission ticket to a Ryan lecture] "Father Ryan's Autograph" [clipping contains a Ryan inscription poem] "Truth" [clipping contains a poem attributed to Ryan ] RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE

95. Dictionary Of Basilian Biography Book 10
Father Ryan had a lifelong interest in priestly vocations. Father Ryan wasa quiet, reserved priest, of average height but very heavily built.
http://www.basilian.org/Publica/Necrhtml/BasBio/dictionary10.htm
RANC , Jean LOUIS, priest, brother of Father Pierre Ranc, was born in France on March 20, 1821. He died at Annonay on June 28, 1902. Sources: Basilian Archives in Toronto; Catalogue of the Congregation of the Priests of St. Basil (Toronto, Chanoine Fromenton: (Aubenas, RANC , Jean PIERRE, priest, brother of Father Louis Ranc, was born in France on January 1, 1816. He died at Annonay, France, on January 25, 1894. Sources: Basilian Archives in Toronto; Catalogue of the Congregation of the Priests of St. Basil (Toronto, Chanoine Fromenton: (Aubenas, RAPHANEL Sources: Basilian Archives in Toronto; Catalogue of the Congregation of the Priests of St. Basil (Toronto, REATH , Vincent Bernard, priest, was born in St. Thomas, Ontario, on July 10, 1869, the youngest of five boys and one girl born to Moses Reath and Eleanor Bolger. He died at Toronto, Ontario, on January 20, 1929. Father Vincent Reath received his early education in St. Thomas. Then he worked as a telegrapher until 1887 when he went to Assumption College in Windsor, Ontario, to study for the priesthood. He entered St. Basil's Novitiate, Toronto, on August 15, 1892. After profession he continued his studies at St. Michael's College and St. Basil's Seminary, Toronto. He was ordained priest on August 15, 1898. Assumption College was Father Reath's first appointment as a priest. He was a competent teacher of Latin and a recreation master whom students instinctively respected. In 1907 he was transferred to St. Basil's Novitiate, and in 1908 moved to St. Michael's College. He taught at St. Thomas College in Chatham, New Brunswick, 1914-19, then came back to St. Michael's College. He died in 1929 from pneumonia, after injuries sustained in a fall on an icy pavement. Father Reath was buried in the Basilian plot, Mount Hope Cemetery, Toronto.

96. THIS SEARCH THIS DOCUMENT THIS CR ISSUE GO TO Next Hit Forward
RETIREMENT OF FATHER CLARENCE RYAN HON. IKE SKELTON (Extension of Remarks Father Ryan, convinced as a child to enter seminary school by a parish
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?r103:E19JY3-9:

97. Visit American Civil War Battle Sites
Notes, The former home of Father Abram Ryan, Poet Laureate of the Confederacy.Here Father Ryan wrote some of his best known poetry, including “Sea Rest,”
http://www.civilwar.org/TravelersInformation/TravelerDetail.asp?lngTravelersInfo

98. Genealogy Data
Father Ryan, John Joseph Mother Mullen, Ellen (Nell) Margaret. Children.Ryan, Gwendolyn Jeane Birth living Gender Female Ryan, Mary Javene
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Plains/8270/dat25.htm
Genealogy Data
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Hendrickson, Emma Blanche
Birth : 10 DEC 1918
Death : 16 DEC 1987 Broken Bow, Custer Co., Nebraska
Gender: Female
Family: Marriage: 28 AUG 1942 in Lincoln, Nebraska
Spouse: Ryan, Richard Edmond
Birth : 17 JUL 1916 Broken Bow, Custer Co., Nebraska
Death : 28 SEP 1959 Alliance, Nebraska
Gender: Male
Parents: Father: Ryan, John Joseph
Mother: Mullen, Ellen (Nell) Margaret Children: Ryan, Gwendolyn Jeane Birth : living Gender: Female Ryan, Mary Javene Birth : living Gender: Female Ryan, Patricia Kay Birth : living Gender: Female
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Knight, George Ellis Birth : 13 AUG 1912 Nebraska Death : 1 SEP 1973 Nebraska Gender: Male Family: Marriage: 27 JUL 1933 in Anselmo, Custer Co., Nebraska Spouse: Ryan, Ellen Frances Birth : 2 JAN 1915 Neola, Pottawattamie Co., Iowa Death : 29 FEB 1984 Kearney, Buffalo Co., Nebraska Gender: Female Parents: Father: Ryan, John Joseph Mother: Mullen, Ellen (Nell) Margaret Children: Knight, Phyllis Ann Birth : living Gender: Female Knight, Constance Jean

99. Genealogy Data Page 67 (Family Pages)
Spouse Ryan, Thomas A b. Not Shown Gender Male Parents. Father Ryan,Matthew Mother Regnier, Maude. Children. Ryan, Mark Gender Male
http://www.ged4web.com/derik/f_42.htm
Genealogy Data Page 67 (Family Pages)
Individuals marked with a red dot are direct ancestors of Derik Austen Papineau
For privacy reasons, Date of Birth and Date of Marriage for persons believed to still be living are not shown.
Back to Main Page
Long, Walton Leonard
b. Not Shown Anaheim, Orange, CA
Gender: Male
Family: Marriage:Not Shown Anaheim, Orange, CA
Spouse: Blodgett, Marjorie Marie
b. Not Shown Marshall, Lyon, MN
Gender: Female
Parents: Father: Blodgett, Henry Earl
Mother: DeCock, Johanna M
Children:
Back to Main Page
Jay, Nicholas Gender: Male Family: Marriage:Not Shown Spouse: Long,, Janis Marianne b. Not Shown Santa Ana, Orange, CA Gender: Female Parents: Father: Long, Walton Leonard Mother: Blodgett, Marjorie Marie
Back to Main Page
Hauf, Tim Gender: Male Family: Marriage:Not Shown Spouse: Long, Johanna Rae b. Not Shown Santa Ana, Orange, CA Gender: Female Parents: Father: Long, Walton Leonard Mother: Blodgett, Marjorie Marie

100. Bibliographies--Theologians--John A. Ryan-- Works About
Brown, RG Father Ryan and the Minimum Wage. Survey 34 (April 10, 1915) 5758 . Broderick, F. But Constitutions Can Be Changed; Father John A. Ryan and
http://www.stthomas.edu/libraries/ireland/guides/bibliographies/jaryan2.htm
St Thomas' Theology Library BibliographiesTheologiansJohn A. Ryan Works About COMPILED BY BETTY BIGELBACH
Theological Reference Librarian St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity
University of St. Thomas
St. Paul, Minnesota
WORKS ABOUT JOHN AUGUSTINE RYAN
Arranged chronologically
BOOKS
Columbia University Special Convocation for the Conferring of Honorary Degrees Upon Rabbi Louis Finkelstein, The Rt. Rev. Monsignor John Augustine Ryan and the Rt. Rev. George Arthur Butterick. NY: Columbia University, 1944. Gearty, Patrick William. The Economic Thought of Monsignor John A. Ryan. Washington : Catholic University of America Press, 1953. Rafton, Harold Robert. What do Roman Catholic Colleges teach? A review of Ryan and Boland's book, Catholic Principles of Politics. Boston: Beacon Press, 1953. Cerny, Karl H. Monsignor John A. Ryan and the Social Action Department : An Analysis of a Leading School of American Catholic Social Thought. Yale University. 1955,1973. Thesis. Perlman, Mark. Labor Union Theories in America : Background and Development. Evanston, Ill., Row, Peterson 1958.

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