Word: sergius
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...Russian Orthodox Church ''a reactionary, counter-revolutionary force, run by ignorant and dirty priests." Rector Day was either unaware or heedless that his Church is in close sympathy with the Orthodox communion, and that in the front row of his audience sat a distinguished convention guest-Rev. Sergius Bulgakov, dean of the Russian Orthodox Seminary in Paris. His eyes blazing and his long beard flying. Professor Bulgakov strode up to the chairman on the platform, exclaimed: "You have sinned against God in permitting that man to speak!" Next day New Jersey's Bishop Matthews, as host...
...last week the most advanced technique for blood transfusion was to be found in Moscow. There, the instant someone commits suicide, dies of hears failure, or is killed by accident, an ambulance rushes his corpse to Sklifassovsky Institute for Urgent Aid where one of Surgeon Sergius Judin's aides quickly straps the body to a see-saw table, tilts it head down, drains the blood through a tap in the jugular vein. A small quantity of blood is set aside for laboratory study while the rest, treated with potassium citrate, goes into cold storage. Surgeon Judin, who perfected...
...delegation is headed by Peter Shuebruk '32, and under him are working R. L. Behrens '34, Ulrich Kersten gr.L., W. C. Loring, Jr. '35, E. H. Hickey '33, and Matthias Landau 3L. M. A. Hoffman '34 is the chairman of the group representing Siam, while with him are associated Sergius Portal '35, D. M. Sullivan '32, Robert Blinn, A. D. Cadman '35, and J. W. Page '33. The unofficial observers include C. S. Houston '35, Peregrine White '33, J. S. Grossman '33, O. H. Davis '34, Gilbert Kerlin '33, C. A. Engvall 2T.S., S. J. Wener '33, and Horace Hart...
People with important secrets do not yet whisper them into radio telephones because they know that anyone with a radio set can eavesdrop. But last week in Manhattan, Sergius Paul Grace, vice president of Bell Telephone Laboratories, demonstrated how radio conversations may be absolutely private. Mr. Grace played a phonograph record into a special type of microphone. The audience heard an ordinary speech. Then he took away the microphone, played the record alone. Listeners heard a gibberish of strange grunts and squeaks...
Although numerous U. S. correspondents sent out signed despatches quoting the Metropolitan, described minutely the whole scene, still next day in Riga, Latvia, the local Orthodox Archbishop announced the impossibility that Sergius could have uttered his words, and the Morning Post told Londoners that Sergius is a "tool" of the Soviets. Little impression was made in either Britain or the U. S. by the publication cf a statement signed by Chief Rabbi Henachem Gluskin of Minsk, though no one accused him of being a "tool," for all Jewry knows his stalwart saintliness...