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the photo by:Chris Martin | photosbychrismartin.com
www.flickr.com/photos/wordsnowheard/3598829971/in/set-721...
During the Papal visit on 17 February 1981, NARAPHIL was tasked to perform a welcome arnis exhibition along Roxas Boulevard that extend more than five kilometers from the corner of the Cultural Center of the Philippines at Vito Cruz St. in Manila to the Redemptorist Church in Baclaran in Pasay City.
It was said to be the most challenging show that NARAPHIL ever did and probably no arnis organization can duplicate its fete. More than 2,600 members participated in that activity coming from the different school chapters and community-based clubs in Metro-Manila and adjacent provinces.
(Photo courtesy of NARAPHIL)
Benedict XVI (born Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger) was elected Pope at the age of 78. He is the oldest person to have been elected Pope since Pope Clement XII (1730–40). He had served longer as a cardinal than any Pope since Benedict XIII (1724–30). He is the ninth German Pope, the eighth having been the Dutch-German Pope Adrian VI (1522–23) from Utrecht. The last Pope named Benedict was Benedict XV, an Italian who reigned from 1914 to 1922, during World War I (1914–18).
The official list of titles of Pope Benedict XVI, in the order in which they are given in the Annuario Pontificio, is: Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Jesus Christ, Successor of the Prince of the Apostles, Supreme Pontiff of the Universal Church, Primate of Italy, Archbishop and Metropolitan of the Roman Province, Sovereign of the State of Vatican City, Servant of the Servants of God.
Pope Benedict XVI leads the recitation of the Holy Rosary during a candlelight vigil at the Catholic shrine of Fatima in central Portugal, May 12, 2010.
Please credit M.Mazur/www.thepapalvis
Pope Benedict XVI leads the recitation of the Holy Rosary during a candlelight vigil at the Catholic shrine of Fatima in central Portugal, May 12, 2010.
Please credit M.Mazur/www.thepapalvis
Title: Pope
Alternative Title: [General John Pope, Union Army]
Creator: Unknown
Date: ca. 1861-1864
Part of: Collection of Civil War and military cartes de visite and portraits
Physical Description: 1 print on carte de visite mount; 10 x 6 cm.
File: ag2007_0007_115c_pope.jpg
Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.
For more information and to view the image in high resolution, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/civ/id/431
View the Civil War: Photographs, Manuscripts, and Imprints Collection
Pope Francis is the 265th Successor of Saint Peter (after Pope Benedict XVI who is depicted here), and a son of St Ignatius, who is shown at the bottom of this window. He was born in Argentina, hence the flag is shown at the top of the window.
This window was installed in Manila Cathedral after Pope Francis visited and said Mass in the cathedral on 15 January 2015.
David Pope ran a fleet of fast trucks between the Rio Grande Valley of Texas to points north. He died much too young and an artist out of Waco painted David's life and passion on the sides of the refrigerated trailer.
Cabinet card portrait by Barnett McFee Clinedinst with "Theodate Pope Wilson" written on verso.
This is very likely the Theodate Pope Souder who died on 2/13/1987 in Leesburg, VA.
A resident of Purcellville, VA in Loudoun County at the time of her death, Souder was born in Washington on 5/15/1902 to Franklin P. Wilson, an insurance executive, and Elizabeth Hoge Wilson, a native Washingtonian. She appears to have been named for her paternal grandmother, and spent at least part of her childhood at the still-standing 1339 Girard Street, NW.
A Quaker, Souder was noted along with her mother as a participant in Woman's Christian Temperance Union events in DC as a child by the Star and attended Sidwell Friends. A 1923 Wellesley graduate known as "Ted" to her classmates, she was reported in a yearbook to be quiet and a good student. She was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and head of the archery squad in the year of her graduation, and played for Wellesley's basketball team.
At some point in the early 1930s, Souder began a career as a teacher and academic administrator, working in New York and Richmond, IN. She eventually returned to her father's hometown of Purcellville, where her family owned a dairy farm called Oak Knoll. After her mother's death in 1948, she appears to have inherited a controlling interest in it. She shared it in part with her brother, Franklin P. Wilson, Jr. (founder of Silver Spring's Wilson Pontiac, which looks to have been in business from the mid-40s to c. 2000).
In 1953, when she was 51, Theodate married Charles Granville Souder (1881-1967), a fellow Quaker and retired Army doctor and public health officer often credited with the invention of the dog tag. At the time of her death at age 84 from Alzheimer's disease, she was listed as the owner and operator of Oak Knoll Farm (the land has since been developed, but the Oak Knoll name is still attached to the subdivision on the site.)
She is buried at Arlington National Cemetery with her husband and his first wife.