Stories, Listed By Author brethren of the Coast, (ar) The Tribute, ed. D. MacKenzie, John Horn Limited 1930 Children Are Bored on Sunday, (ss) New yorker Feb 21 1948 http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/anth/s163.htm
Stories, Listed By Author The Boys of the Marion, (ss) Chums Nov 27 1907 * brethren All, (ss) Once, in Aleppo, (nv) Playboy Dec 1964 * The Priest, (ss) New yorker Apr 7 http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/s1225.htm
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents SCOTT, S. R. CLELAND (chron.) SCOTT, STANLEY (chron.) SCOTT, SUSAN (chron.) SCOTT, TIMOTHY C. (chron.) SCOTT, TOM (chron.) _, trans. SCOTT, W. E. (chron.) SCOTT, [Sir] WALTER (chron.) Duel between the Black Knight and Wamba, (sg) Ferry of the Loaf, (ex); The Tales of a Grandfather, 1828. Queen Elizabeth and Amy Robert, (ss) The St. Nicholas Treasure Box of Literature- The Archery Contest from Ivanhoe, (vi) St. Nicholas Magazine
The New Yorker: Press Releases his failure to persuade his brethren has been a big disappointment. The March 28, 2005, issue of The New yorker goes on sale at newsstands beginning http://ny-2.live.advance.net/press/content/
Extractions: Margaret Talbot The New Yorker like very I The March 28, 2005, issue also features Ken Auletta David Owen James Surowiecki Plus: Hendrik Hertzberg Ben McGrath John Lahr John Updike on a new biography of Kierkegaard (p. 71); Louis Menand David Gates (p. 56). The March 28, 2005, issue of The New Yorker goes on sale at newsstands beginning Monday, March 21st. Visit a site: Concierge Epicurious Style Swoon Allure Glamour Lucky Self Teen Vogue The New Yorker GQ Architectural Digest Cargo Vanity Fair Subscribe to a magazine: View Special Offers View All Titles Allure Architectural Digest Bride's Cargo Details Domino Elegant Bride Glamour Golf Digest Golf For Women Golf World Gourmet GQ Jane Lucky Modern Bride Self Teen Vogue The New Yorker Vanity Fair Vogue W Wired
The New Yorker: Online Only Here, she talks to The New yorkers Amy Davidson about Scalias legal philosophy, I think that he thinks of his brethren as, in some ways, lost causes, http://ny-2.live.advance.net/online/content/index.ssf?050328on_onlineonly01
The New Yorker Dr. Groopman writes for Visit New yorker dot com dismissed the mysticalflights of their Hasidic brethren, staying steady on the rational road to God. http://www.jeromegroopman.com/godbrain.html
Extractions: Home Books Articles TV Series ... Biography Each morning, as the sun rises I pray. The shaharith service is largely unvarying, except that there is a different Psalm for each day of the week. I know most of the prayers by heart, and often close my eyes as I recite them. This purposeful blindness allows me to retreat from the distractions of the surrounding world. My Jewish heritage is mixed the tight scholastic rationalism of Vilna, in Lithuania, on my fathers side, and the ecstatic Hasidic mysticism of Hungarys Carpathian Mountains, on my mothers and, while praying, I try to touch both traditions. Sometimes I will think about the root of a particular word in an attempt to delve deeper into the message of the text. Other times, I recite the ancient Hebrew words in a rapid monotone until they flood over me, submerging distinct thought. As I near the end of the prayers, I search for a kernel of meaning for the day ahead. For example, on Tuesdays, which I generally spend in the clinic, seeing people with cancer, blood diseases, and AIDS, I recite Psalm 82; it instructs us to uphold the downtrodden and the destitute. Fridays are devoted to analyzing the weeks accumulated laboratory data the sequence or function of a novel gene, the structure of a cellular protein, the effects of a new drug and that days Psalm, No. 93, celebrates the mystery and majesty of the physical world. But there are many mornings, at home or in synagogue, when ritual fails to bring meaning. Etymology then feels like a self-indulgent parlor game; the rhythmic chanting is distracting rather than transporting. Closing my eyes brings only darkness and a chilling sense of emptiness.
Keywords Arranged Alphabetically Lendrum Mennonite brethren Church Lentz Les Truffles au Chocolat Lesezirkel New yorker Staatszeitung Newbrook Newburg Newburg Church of God (Irvine) http://www.ualberta.ca/~german/altahistory/alphake2.htm
Extractions: Looking for a certain term or proper name (of a person, a club, a church, a business etc.)? Click on a letter to view all terms beginning with that letter. (There are more than 3,900 terms in this list). A B C D ... Z Please note: 1. Many words with umlauts appear in both their umlauted form and their anglicized form (e.g.,
New York Post / Jossip less surprised by how cushy Friedman thought Auletta s job was at The New yorker.Though we should, of course, never be surprised to find our brethren http://www.jossip.com/gossip/new-york-post/index.php
Extractions: Reader's Digest 's publishing arm might have a Rosie O'Donnell of its own on their hands, with foodie Rachel Ray manhandling all aspects of her upcoming bimonthly Every Day With Rachael Ray NYP v. NYDN , Page Six calls out yesterday's Daily News front page for its Hurricane Katrina hope-or-hopeless mixed message. But will it make Tabloid Wars Newsday is killing staffer morale yet again with layoffs on the horizon . The Kew Gardens office will likely be shuttered with Manhattan's news cubes drastically emptied as well. landed in second after (no surprise here) Fox News. Guardian newspaper relaunches this month with a new, smaller (Berliner) format, ditching its tabloid format in dimensions only.
Keeping Faith, Changing Faith Gosse s father, a leader among the brethren, had no less an ambition in bringingup the the Exclusives were led by James Taylor, a New yorker, and then, http://www.kensington-unitarians.org.uk/sermons/s_cm_keeping.html
Extractions: About Us Contact/Map People Minister ... Messageboard If you've ever read Edmund Gosse's account of his religious education in his classic autobiography of Victorian childhood, Father and Son (1907), you'll understand why those of more liberal Christian instincts might look on the Plymouth Brethren somewhat warily. Gosse's father, a leader among the Brethren, had no less an ambition in bringing up the young Edmund than to save his soul. For the boy, it was a painful process. But, having myself been brought up as a Roman Catholic - a group for which Gosse Senior had nothing but pious expletives - I must say I feel a certain recognition of some of what this boyish education consisted of. My prep school Catholicism, including confession, Latin hymns, catechisms and arcane instruction about Plenary Indulgences, was similarly intense. Like Gosse's, my feelings about it now are mixed. As Unitarians, we like to think our style is less dogmatic than either of those experiences of religious instruction. That may be true. But we are also very vague. There's almost nothing to sign up to; in fact we positively welcome people who don't believe in God, are having some kind of spiritual crisis, or haven't the slightest idea what they think. Tolerance is one thing we all feel happy about. And if there's one thing we're completely intolerant about ...it's intolerance. I don't think we can go too far wrong with trying to be tolerant of different religions. But by the same token, I don't think we should make how tolerant those religions are of other faiths, the yardstick by which we value them. Our own tolerance is surely, to some extent, the flip side of a lack of clarity in our own beliefs. Only those who, in the end, don't have very strong views about the distinctions between one faith and another, can be quite so relaxed about the choice between doctrines which are obviously at odds with each other.
Judges Retaliate Against News and Issues Every New yorker Must Know issues before the court for fearof being blackballed or retaliated against by the judge and their brethren. http://theempirejournal.com/New_Folder/judges_retaliate_against.htm
Extractions: Power is the great evil with which we are contending. We have divided power between three branches of government and erected checks and balances to prevent abuse of power. However, where is the check on the power of the judiciary? If we fail to check the power of the judiciary, I predict that we will eventually live under judicial tyranny. Patrick Henry THEY DESERVE OUR SUPPORT
BRETHREN IN CHRIST: AN UNEASY SYNTHESIS OF HERITAGE STREAMS Early brethren In Christ Blending of Anabaptism and Pietism brethren In One way to see the yorker reaction is to understand it as a reemphasis of the http://wesley.nnu.edu/wesleyan_theology/theojrnl/31-35/33-1-05.htm
Extractions: AN UNEASY SYNTHESIS OF HERITAGE STREAMS by Luke Keefer Two questions are central here. In relation to the Brethren In Christ denomination (hereafter BIC): (1) "What are the streams of church tradition that comprise this tradition?" and "What is the nature and extent of the integration of these streams in the current denominational identity?" I will address both of these questions and in that order, since the theological analysis of the second question is decisively affected by the historical evidence associated with the first. What Are the Streams of This Heritage? With the pioneering work of Asa Climenhaga in 1942 and the focused research since 1960 of Owen Alderfer, Carlton Wittlinger, Martin Schrag, and E. Morris Sider, it has been a common consensus that traditionally three streams have made up this heritage. They are Anabaptism, Pietism, and Wesleyanism. Within the last decade, however, there appears to have emerged a fourth stream, Evangelicalism. It will be helpful to examine each of these streams in sequence, noting their characteristic qualities and investigating how the BIC is shaping and being shaped by these streams into a broader, more eclectic identity. With this shaping comes the concern that currently the fourth stream may be excessively dominant at the expense of the denomination's classic heritage synthesis.
SARI NUSSEIBEH IN THE NEW YORKER: RAGE AND REASON THE NEW yorker. RAGE AND REASON. by DAVID REMNICK like certain Israelis, hasthe ability to think as critically about his brethren as about the Other. http://www.chicagopeacenow.org/rr-13.html
Extractions: SARI NUSSEIBEH IN THE NEW YORKER: RAGE AND REASON LETTER FROM JERUSALEM THE NEW YORKER RAGE AND REASON by DAVID REMNICK Will anyone listen to the P.L.O.'s voice of restraint? Issue of 2002-05-06 Posted 2002-04-29 Nusseibeh summoned up that day with a wry smile. "I remember it well," he said to me. "I'd just finished delivering a lecture at the university on liberalism and tolerance." A few weeks ago, I met Nusseibeh at the Damascus Gate, one of the gates leading into the Old City of Jerusalem. Israeli troops and tanks were still in cities throughout the West Bank, and Colin Powell had been dispatched to the region, travelling everywhere and, it appeared, getting nowhere. Arafat clearly understands Nusseibeh's value. Until last year, Arafat's representative in Jerusalem had been another of the city's Palestinian dynasts, Faisal Husseini, and when Husseini died, of a heart attack, while travelling in Kuwait, Arafat turned to Nusseibeh. For months, Nusseibeh resisted, worrying that he would be a for-display-only appointment. More important, he thought that the second intifada, which followed Arafat's rejection of Israeli proposals for a final settlement and Ariel Sharon's visit to the Temple Mount in September, 2000, was not an effective uprising"not really an intifada at all" but, rather, a series of terrible mistakes and improvisations that would lead to radicalization on the Palestinian side, a strengthening of the right wing on the Israeli side, and, above all, the bloody dissolution of trust on both sides. Nusseibeh finally took the job, but his forecast proved all too accurate.
The Finished Mystery - Revelation - Chapter 9 four kinds of Plymouth brethren, three kinds of River brethren, the brethrenin Christ, Old Order or yorker and United Zion s Children, http://www.strictlygenteel.co.uk/finishedmystery/fmr9.html
Extractions: Links to the various sections can be found at the bottom of the page. This posthumous work of Pastor Russell (arranged for use as a textbook) is much condensed, including the extracts from the Pastor's pen, all of which are referred back to his works. The abbreviations used are: A, B, C, D,E, F The six preceding volumes of "STUDIES IN THE SCRIPTURES". (Citations to E in italic figures refer to old editions, figures in ordinary type to later editions.) B. S. M........... "THE BIBLE STUDENTS MONTHLY." H..................... "What Say the Scriptures ABOUT HELL?" P-D................. "PHOTO-DRAMA OF CREATION" Scenario. T..................... "TABERNACLE SHADOWS." S..................... "SPIRITISM" Pamphlet. Z...................... "ZION'S WATCH TOWER," followed by year and page. The citations to REVELATION and EZEKIEL refer to the comments herein, as well as to the Bible text.
Baby Boomers: View Of Unity In Diversity Some brethren paint a bleak picture for the future of the churches of Christ . I read contemporary magazines such as Time and the New yorker for a http://www.bible-infonet.org/ff/articles/agents/108_08_18.htm
Extractions: The Baby Boomers and Unity in Diversity By J. E. Choate Some brethren paint a bleak picture for the future of the churches of Christ. The alarming note is sounded that the conservative churches must change their patterns of worship to accommodate the "paradigms" of the "new hermeneutic" or face extinction. They tell us that the hope of the church tomorrow is now in the hands of the baby boomers. The editors of Wineskins would have us believe that they possess profound and unusual knowledge into the religious needs of the baby boomers. Indeed the baby boomers now sit in positions of power and authority in every segment of our society. They are enjoying the privileges which go with the "rights of passage" from one generation to another. This is the title of a new book written by University of California sociology professor, D. Wade Clark Roof, which examines the religious status of the baby boomers in American churches. The scholarly study has been carefully researched and documented. No similar study has been attempted by our erudite brethren. In lieu of any documented study of their own, they fill the void with an assumed form of profound knowledge. The author finds that one-third of the baby boomers remain in their childhood churches. About one-fourth of the defectors have returned. The large majority (42 percent) remain "dropouts" from formal religion. Dr. Roof reports that the Disciples of Christ have suffered the greatest loss (45 percent) of all the churches. Our liberal brethren have close ties with the Disciples, appearing on their lectureships and writing for their publications.
Why Does Tim Russert Associate With Don Imus' Bigotry? Remnick is the editor of The New yorker, a biographer of boxer Muhammad Ali, accused Imus of slinging night soil on the least of the brethren. http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1751
Washingtonpost.com Special Report: Clinton Accused (Blumenthal credited Thomason in the New yorker with exposing the scandal in the of the Clinton presidency was quickly ridiculed by his media brethren. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/clinton/stories/blumenthal
Extractions: Sidney Blumenthal sat in the National Press Club audience, beaming, as a painfully pompous White House reporter bemoaned his fate. "Last time I asked for an interview with the first lady, some kid from the campaign laughed at me! . . . If I could just get a little access from this White House, just a little," the scribe whined. Blumenthal could well afford to lampoon shut-out reporters. When he wrote and staged this play depicting the White House press corps as a bunch of scandal-crazed buffoons, one part was played by Labor Secretary Robert Reich. When he threw a party at his Takoma, D.C., home, his friend Hillary Rodham Clinton stopped by. Just the other week, he moderated a discussion on Europe with a half-dozen historians and his friend Madeleine Albright, over red snapper and white wine in the secretary of state's eighth-floor dining room. For more than five years, the former writer for the New Yorker, the New Republic and The Washington Post has fended off charges that he is too close to the Clintonites. Now those accusations have been given retroactive resonance as Blumenthal assumes his new post: assistant to the president.
Extractions: showNetworkBanner(1); var story_id = 148824; Home Opinions By Jason Alba, MBA2 albaj@umich.edu Published: Monday, November 19, 2001 I read with interest the editorial in the MSJ of 11/5. I, too, reacted with concern and dismay upon hearing news of the clash between police and firefighters at the World Trade Center site. Again, I would like to offer a New Yorker's perspective on this event. This may sound like a public relations letter for the NYPD and FDNY, but I believe that these points should be made in light of this event. I apologize for my lack of brevity. The meaning of "getting back to normalcy" is grossly different for these men and women than it is for the rest of the country. For you and I, "normalcy" has meant finding solace in your family and friends, resuming the pursuit of your daily activities, and somehow developing a rational understanding of the events and identifying cautionary learning points for the future. In our perches as business school students in the Midwest, I tend to think that the pursuit of normalcy has been relatively straightforward, as it has been, I assume, for most of the country. This exercise is much easier when you can choose the type and depth of disaster images that you see, when you can moderate your exposure to the events by a click of a remote control or mouse.
I Do Not Think That They Will Sing To Me: 06/16/2002 - 06/22/2002 story about how, despite everyone s expectations, a New yorker did right by oneof his brethren, thereby exploding the myth that all New yorkers are http://divert.blogspot.com/2002_06_16_divert_archive.html
Extractions: @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?blogID=3414780"); (But you were always on my mind.) View my complete profile It's a mixtape/random quotation/regain perspective kind of day. When I find myself likely to wallow in a sad or disturbing or otherwise unpleasant situation over which I have limited control, I try (not always successfully) to pull myself together in one of two ways: either by engaging in a sort of Schadenfreude fest in which I allow myself to make positive (from my perspective) comparisons between my own current pickle and the significantly brinier pickles of others; or by reminding myself that even if the current unpleasantness were to end in the most horrid way possible (which, God and the boy and my own moody Cancerian self willing, it won't), it would not spell the end of my world (despite initial appearances). So I walk down Market this morning, iced Peet's in hand, and think, first, you must give sad and sorry thanks (always, always) for the fact that this street is not your home (an extreme view, but a useful and humbling reminder). Then I think, whatever you might lose now, you will always have that drunken night of donut soccer with Dave and Otis; those quiet moments of holding baby Ev, just up from her nap, in Mom and Dad's living room, and for a while it's just the two of you, her exceedingly pleasant weight in your arms; you and Sarah in laughing tears as you model her new underwear over your jeans; wandering around Nashville with Eric and Erfert, Tenneesse whiskey on the brain; lying on the grass with Dave and Jimmy at Kelt and Kristina's wedding and just looking up, forever up, and out, and beyond.
Washington City Paper: Ad Nausea Hornby didnt start the trend, but the ladlit author gave his brethren theirwatershed moment when the New yorker published his Kid A review, on Oct. 30, http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/special/artcover070805.html
Extractions: advertisement Novelty Rock N Eddie Vedder. Tim Robbins. Both big fans. Sarah Vowell. Again, huge fan. The Woods The Woods The Ice Storm was a longtime fan. He knew their history. They knew his e-mail address. Paris Review Please, not Patti. And please, not the hair-on-the-neck thing. Moody goes on to describe not a band but a classic-rock mash-up. The bio amounts to an EMP exhibit of Rolling Stone Document -era Peter Buck, take a bow. Nod your crusty heads, Mr. Garcia and Mr. Page. Led Zeppelin II Spin . Jonathan Lethem weighed in on the passing of Joey Ramone for the New York Times . An entire cast of SONGBOOK Times and the New Yorker H New Yorker published his Kid A review, on Oct. 30, 2000. The novelist had parlayed the success of his High Fidelity Kid A Kid A New York Times Book Review : a bigger audience, one that may buy that Wilco book and read that tedious essay. Doolittle was your Outside by declaring in the New York Times Harvard Advocate Spin is E magazine and Web site. Take that column inspired by Songbook Aside from the narcissistic prose, these authors share with Eggers a lack of desire to engage with any culture outside their own alt-pop, college-rock, new-folk, Time-Life-classics orbit. In a recent
C-Ville Weekly At Wylers New yorker, JD Salinger is reimagined as an annoying colleague Protestantsmembers of a small sect called the Plymouth brethrenwho could http://www.c-ville.com/www/archives/2004/03-23-2004/asp/1.asp
Extractions: Back to archived page Love Me As with much of his work, Love Me Happy To Be Here How To Write Your Novel in Thirty Days and produces a pulpish best seller, Spacious Skies . His job at The New Yorker follows, then a flop of a sequel ( Amber Waves of Grain Wobegon Boy , to the Atlantic Monthly in a 1997 interview. The hyperbolic absurdity of the overhaul contemplated for The New Yorker by its publisher in Love Me Love Me is too fanciful to be cutting and the targets too small to alarm. Happy To Be Here and later bundled with other stories to become the foundation of his 1991 novel WLT: A Radio Romance WLT: A Radio Romance