A dedication ceremony was conducted by the station chaplain at RAF Linton-on-Ouse, Squadron Leader Eleanor Rance. |
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In just a short time, the chaplain had affected their lives in a remarkable way. |
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The chaplain will be asked to work for a couple of hours a week chatting and listening to customers and staff. |
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A Church Commissioner, he was formerly a vicar in Manchester and earlier an assistant chaplain at Eton. |
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Leading fee-paying schools in Edinburgh, meanwhile, have a Presbyterian chaplain. |
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In the course of making an escape from prison Taylor shoots the prison chaplain. |
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Another brother, Henry, entered the Church and became chaplain to the Duke of York. |
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Another person who urged him to act publicly was the Dominican student chaplain in Berlin. |
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Coun Dodd is an Anglican priest who spent several years as a hospital chaplain at Castle Hill hospital near Hull. |
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Chapel attendance was low and many soldiers later said they did not even know who the chaplain was. |
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The former Manchester vicar and one-time Eton chaplain has consistently declined to comment on the allegations against him. |
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Witnesses were limited to the hangman and his assistants, a few prison guards and a chaplain. |
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The other significant challenge is ensuring the staff chaplain has current, accurate, and detailed information once deployed. |
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For emergencies after office hours, a chaplain is on call 24 hours a day and can be paged by a staff member. |
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A Jesuit uncle, then chaplain to the Seattle community of Carmelite nuns, made an emergency appeal for prayers. |
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A genial and gracious host, and a conscientious hospital chaplain, he was to spend the next twelve years in these ministries. |
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We are accompanied into the tent by a chaplain, a funeral director and two psychologists, all women. |
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He was a Navy chaplain for 27 years, under fire with the Marines in Vietnam, retired as a rear admiral. |
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The service to rebury the bones was conducted by police chaplain Rev Dr Mike Ward. |
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The chaplain at St Georges Church lays to rest the bodies of WW1 soldiers that are still regularly unearthed. |
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Rev Ruth Scott, a mother of two, works as a part-time chaplain in Richmond Church Charity's seven almshouses. |
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After a blessing by branch chaplain Father John Tyrrell, Mayor Everitt and John Gould cut the ribbon to officially open the building. |
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Even the battalion chaplain, Steve Hommel, ended up shouldering an M16 rifle. |
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I have to tolerate mandatory formations being opened with an invocation by the chaplain. |
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The prison chaplain walked up to me and asked for my hand, on which he placed a rubber stamp. |
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He was also a chaplain for the university students until 1951, when he again took up his studies on philosophy and theology. |
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We began with prayer led by Graham Jones, the Methodist chaplain, and the sharing of bread and wine. |
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A chaplain is trying to deliver the closing benediction with confetti and late-arriving balloons still cascading down from the rafters. |
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He didn't, however, follow through with his desire to be a conscientious objector, he says, because the unit chaplain discouraged him. |
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He spends the next half hour with the chaplain and then the chaplain helps him back to the lines and arranges for him to fly out home. |
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Ceremonies at Chatby, led by a Royal Navy chaplain and defence staff from Britain's embassy in Egypt, did not solely concentrate on the Napoleonic era. |
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Guidance provided by a unit chaplain can extend beyond religion and away from the barracks, with padres deploying to the field in support of the troops. |
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Davis is a former chaplain and associate professor of religion at Skidmore College. |
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He hoped also to be a chaplain through his local church, and he was nearing the end of his formal training. |
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A PAPD chaplain said a prayer and the three honor guards folded the three flags as they would at a triple burial. |
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In 1976 he became assistant curate at Cheam in Surrey and after five years became head of religious studies and chaplain at Radley College in Oxford. |
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Today, he continues to serve as chaplain affiliated with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. |
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He revolted from the Roman Church and by 1613-14 was again a Protestant, later becoming a doctor of divinity at Cambridge and chaplain to the king. |
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A chaplain receives the same pay, benefits and allowances as any other officer of his rank, and is eligible for full retirement benefits if he serves twenty years. |
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Each morning we got together to hear God's Word preached by the chaplain. |
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He swallowed his pride and went to see Bossuet, the Court chaplain. |
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It would be conducted around a bier of wreaths and a serviceman's hat, with a firing party with heads bowed and a chaplain to read the words from the military burial service. |
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The king walked immediately behind the Holy Sacrament, carried by the archbishop of Paris, while the chief royal chaplain held His Majesty's Candle. |
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The chaplain had to administer the last rites to his flight boots. |
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Bratton now announced that he was appointing Ramos an honorary chaplain at the 84th Precinct where he was assigned. |
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In 1919, he was chaplain to the Ukrainian soldiers fighting the Bolshevik troops. |
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We diverted ourselves with bantering several poor scholars with hopes of being at least his lordship's chaplain. |
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When he was not studying, he was botanizing or mineralogizing with O'Toole's chaplain. |
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To his chaplain, Osborn, later William's Bishop of Exeter, Edward gave the harbour and other land at Bosham. |
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For example, an Anglican chaplain, Robert Wolfall, with Martin Frobisher's Arctic expedition celebrated the Eucharist in 1578 in Frobisher Bay. |
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With Nelson at this point were the chaplain Alexander Scott, the purser Walter Burke, Nelson's steward, Chevalier, and Beatty. |
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The coffin was taken into the Admiralty for the night, attended by Nelson's chaplain, Alexander Scott. |
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He became chaplain to Charles I and was the last English cleric to hold both church and secular high office. |
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He then became chaplain successively to Lord Saye and Sele, and by 1641 to Lord Berkeley. |
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In 1644 he became chaplain to Prince Charles Louis, nephew of King Charles I, who was then in England. |
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As one of the conditions of her marriage she had brought a bishop named Liudhard with her to Kent as her chaplain. |
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When Archbishop of Canterbury William Warham died, the Boleyn family's chaplain, Thomas Cranmer, was appointed to the vacant position. |
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In 1618 he became chaplain to Viscount Doncaster, who was on an embassy to the princes of Germany. |
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Seafarers' welfare organisation, Apostleship of the Sea has a port chaplain in Aberdeen to offer practical and pastoral support to them. |
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The first Protestant worship service was conducted on 28 August 1898 by an American military chaplain named Rev. |
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This failed so miserably that he accepted the lesser post of secretary and chaplain to the Earl of Berkeley, one of the Lords Justice of Ireland. |
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As chaplain to Lord Berkeley, he spent much of his time in Dublin and travelled to London frequently over the next ten years. |
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The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to serve as galley slaves. |
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Knox's powers as a preacher came to the attention of the chaplain of the garrison, John Rough. |
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Seafarers' charity, Apostleship of the Sea has a chaplain to support the needs of mariners arriving at the port. |
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On taking orders he was appointed secretary to John Overall, Bishop of Lichfield, and then domestic chaplain to Richard Neile, Bishop of Durham. |
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He went to France, preached at Paris, and served as chaplain to some members of the household of the exiled royal family. |
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He was persuaded to leave his work as a chaplain in Oxford and take over the wardenless friary, so that the work would not have to cease. |
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Both advised they did not require the services of a chaplain. |
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Fraser Harvey, the Anglican chaplain at the Canadian Forces Base in Borden, Ont. |
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New Mexican missionary Father Albert Braun was known for his respect for Mescalero Apache traditions and was later decorated as a chaplain in both World Wars. |
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In the same year he was ordained as a deacon in the Church of England and became the first chaplain of Clifton College mission, ministering to one of Bristol's poorest areas. |
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The first Church of England service was a celebration of Holy Communion at Frobisher Bay around 3 September 1578 by the chaplain on Martin Frobisher's voyage to the Arctic. |
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Resources such as a judge advocate, chaplain or mental health clinician are available and can help the student determine if he or she is qualified for ICBM training. |
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Gerald became a royal clerk and chaplain to King Henry II of England in 1184, first acting mediator between the crown and Prince Rhys ap Gruffydd. |
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While in exile, Knox was licensed to work in the Church of England, where he rose in the ranks to serve King Edward VI of England as a royal chaplain. |
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Pound spent three weeks in isolation in the heat, sleeping on the concrete, denied exercise and communication, except for conversations with the chaplain. |
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From this wage, 6d per month was deducted for the maintenance of Greenwich Hospital with similar amounts deducted for the Chatham Chest, the chaplain and surgeon. |
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He showed signs of sympathy to Puritanism, attending the sermons of the Puritan chaplain of Gray's Inn and accompanying his mother to the Temple Church to hear Walter Travers. |
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The community of the Tower of London is made up of these Yeoman Warders and their families, the Resident Governor and officers, a chaplain and a doctor. |
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Seafarers welfare charity, Apostleship of the Sea, which provides practical and pastoral support to seafarers, has a port chaplain based at the port. |
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In support of the Roman position, Eanfled had sent her chaplain Romanus, and the position was also taken by Agilbert, a Frankish bishop who also held office in England. |
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The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to be galley slaves, helping to create resentment of the French and martyrs for the Protestant cause. |
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Now, sirs, who hath seen our chaplain? where is our curtal Friar? |
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Well-known atheist, Richard Dawkins, now styles himself as A Devil's Chaplain, the title of a recent book. |
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The Chaplain was kind and polite and tried his level best to be decent. |
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An interesting sidelight offered by the Encyclopedia is information on the Chaplain Support Operations, an area overlooked in Second World War histories. |
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Chaplain believes the fight to retain senior status for struggling teams has lifted the bottom division to new heights. |
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Americans United has asked the Army to rein in the activities of Chaplain Josh Llano at Camp Bushmaster in Iraq. |
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Yesterday the Bishop announced Rev Prys will be moving to the post of Archidiaconal Chaplain at the beginning of April. |
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When the war ended in 1713 with the Treaty of Utrecht, Harrison continued to act as Chaplain to the Garrison at Annapolis Royal. |
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The role of Chaplain is no longer that of a Minor Canon but is in the newly established category of Priest Vicar. |
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The Chaplain is responsible for the pastoral care of the cathedral, under the oversight of the Canon Pastor. |
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Morris had joined the Cambrians in 1875 and in 1892 he had become Chaplain and Librarian to the Duke of Westminster at Eaton Hall near Chester. |
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The current Chaplain of the University is the Reverend Stuart MacQuarrie, and the University appoints Honorary Chaplains of other denominations. |
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Several such articles were included in A Devil's Chaplain, an anthology of writings about science, religion, and politics. |
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Joining her during her year of office will be Undersheriff Steven Jonas and Chaplain The Very Reverend Catherine Ogle. |
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One of the canons is also Rector of St Margaret's Church, Westminster, and often also holds the post of Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons. |
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