Word: revs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Ahead. Older chaplains, wiser in the ways of parish life, found readjustment less difficult but still far from easy. The rector of St. Andrew's Memorial Episcopal Church, Yonkers, N.Y., the Rev. Lynde Elliot May III, 40, entered the Navy in November 1942, served as a "flotilla chaplain" during the invasion of Southern France and elsewhere in the ETO, was discharged in November 1945. The experience as a padre he valued and would not have missed, but he was "darned glad to get back" to the tranquillity of his parish and to his own job. Ex-Chaplain May admitted...
...George's Episcopal Church on Manhattan's East Side, the Rev. Elmore M. McKee assailed the plan as "an example of organized paganism. . . . These men died not for things material but for indestructible values of the spirit. . . . We cannot afford to get bogged down by a misguided, obsolete and patriarchal patriotism which demands American soil for American bodies. Let the dead rather finish the work they...
Died. The Most Rev. and Rt. Hon. Cosmo Gordon Lang, 81, retired (in 1942) Archbishop of Canterbury, who helped raise the wind that blew Edward VIII from his throne ; in Richmond, England...
...Very Rev. Hewlett Johnson, "Red Dean" of Canterbury, set the age of the U.S. more exactly: "I look upon the U.S. as the magnificent adolescent," he said just before flying back to Britain. "We [the British] are approaching middle...
...Russians found another admirer in the Rev. Antonio Laberge, A.A., 40, a native of Rhode Island. As new pastor of the Church of St. Louis des Français, he will soon be the only Roman Catholic priest in Moscow...