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St. George's YouthNet is an inner-city youth mentoring and life-skills education organization located in the North End district of Halifax, Nova Scotia.[1][2][3] The founding director was Stephen Blackwood and the present director is Jane Neish. The services offered by St. George's YouthNet include both lunch and after-school programs. The organization also sponsors a series of camps in the summer.

A recent initiative of St. George's YouthNet was the Moving Images project.[4][5]

St. George's YouthNet is supported by a wide variety of organizations, including the Anglican Parish of St. George. [6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "ST.GEORGE'S YOUTHNET SOCIETY". Donate2Charities.ca. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  2. ^ "St.George's Youthnet Society". The Charitable Impact (Chimp) Foundation of Canada. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  3. ^ Mateshaytis, Sarah; Hornbeck, Evey (January 31, 2013), "Net Worth", Tidings (Winter): 30–31 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  4. ^ Steinman, Lukas. "YOUTHNET MOVING IMAGES". Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  5. ^ "St. George's YouthNet Moving Images Project". The Coast. Coast Publishing Ltd. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  6. ^ "St. George's Round Church". Retrieved March 12, 2013.

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Category:Youth organizations based in Canada Category:Youth empowerment organizations


Robert J. Dodaro is an American academic. He presently serves as the President of of the Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum in Rome, where he is also a Professor of Theology. He is in addition a Professor of Patristic Theology at the Pontifical Lateran University. He is a specialist in the writings of St Augustine of Hippo. He also serves as the Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Augustinus-Lexikon and on the Editorial Advisory Council of Dionysius. His Christ and the Just Society in the Thought of Augustine was published by Cambridge University Press in 2004, and he was in addition a Co-Editor of Augustine: Political Writings, a collection of letters and sermons by Augustine that deal with political matters, and also of Augustine and His Critics, a collection of essays in honour of Gerald Bonner.

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DEFAULTSORT:Fransen, Frederic John Category:Living people

Category:Mont Pelerin Society members Category:University of Chicago alumni


Ronald E.J. "Ronnie" Milne is a popular singer and band director. He is also a distinguished musical arranger who is well known for his band arrangements. He spent his formative years and the first years of his career in the United Kingdom. He subsequently immigrated to Canada in 1953.

He first came to prominence in 1949 when he co-founded, in conjunction with Cliff Adams, Dick James, and others, the vocal group the Stargazers, which quite quickly came to enjoy considerable commerical success. The group appeared on such BBC Radio programmes as Workers' Playtime. Milne not only sang but contributed arrangements. His ability to produce arrangements was a consequence of his having had more formal training in classical music than had most popular musicians. He came from a family of musicians (his father played at one point in the orchestra of the Paris Opera) and he was himself a skilled viola player. For a time he played viola in the London Symphony Orchestra.

In Canada he pursued for many years a military career, working as a band director and arranger of music for band. On the side he continued to arrange and perform popular music in a non-military context. After retiring from the Canadian Armed Forces he took up another career as a teacher of string instruments.




an American environmentalist, editor, and journalist. She is the President of the John W. Pope Center for Higher Education Policy,[1] and has served as a Senior Fellow of the Property and Environment Research Center[2][3] as well as President of the Association of Private Enterprise Education.[4]


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DEFAULTSORT:Milne, Ronald E.J. Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people


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Eugene Rathbone Fairweather was a Canadian theologian born in Ottawa in 1920 who grew in Montreal.[1][2][3][4] For many years he was associated with the National Post, but his work has appeared in a variety of print outlets, including The Guardian, The Observer, and Harper's Magazine.[5][6][7][8]

He was educated at McGill University, the University of Toronto, Trinity College (Toronto), and Union Theological Seminary. In 1949 he returned to Trinity to teach and became the Keble Professor of Divinity in 1964. He was for a time the President of the Canadian Society of Biblical Studies and the Editor of the Canadian Journal of Theology. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and was an honorary docotor of McGill University, the University of King's College in Halifax, and Huron College in London, Ontario. For many years he was a member of the Faith and Order Commission of the World Council of Churches.


In 2016 he was admitted honoris causa to the degree of Doctor Civilis Legis (DCL) of the University of King's College in Halifax.[9][10][11]

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