The origin of the Apostles' nickname dates from the number, twelve, of their founders. Membership consists largely of undergraduates, though there have been graduate student members, and members who already hold university and college posts. The society traditionally drew most of its members from Christ's, St John's, Jesus, Trinity and King's Colleges.
Activities and membership
The society is essentially a discussion group. Meetings are held once a week, traditionally on Saturday evenings, during which one member gives a prepared talk on a topic, which is later thrown open for discussion.
The usual procedure was for members to meet at the rooms of those whose turn it was to present the topic. The host would provide refreshments consisting of coffee and sardines on toast, called "whales". Women first gained acceptance into the society in the 1970s.
There is archaeological evidence of settlement in the area in the Bronze Age and in Roman Britain; under Viking rule, Cambridge became an important trading centre. The first town charters were granted in the 12th century, although city status was not conferred until 1951.
Cambridge is at the heart of the high-technologySilicon Fen with industries such as software and bioscience and many start-up companies spun out of the university. Over 40% of the workforce have a higher education qualification, more than twice the national average. Cambridge is also home to the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, one of the largest biomedical research clusters in the world, soon to be home to AstraZeneca, a hotel and relocated Papworth Hospital.
Cambridge F.C. is a football (soccer) club in Cambridge, New Zealand. They are the 2015 champions of the WaiBOP Premiership, run by the Waikato/Bay of Plenty Football Federation.
Cambridge has eight senior men's teams and three women's teams competing in the Bay of Plenty and Waikato regions. Men's teams play in the WaiBOP Premiership (formerly Federation One) and WaiBOP Championship (formerly Federation Two), the Waikato A, B (2), C, and D (2) divisions and a Sunday league team known as the Red Devils. The women's teams play in the Waikato A, B and C divisions. The club also fields boys' and girls' youth teams and has about 430 junior team players (under 16).
Club history
The club was founded in 1948 and has played at John Kerkhof Park, Cambridge, New Zealand, since 1967. The teams play in red and white, a legacy of the club's first president Vic Butler's support of Arsenal F.C..
Playing record
The club achieved its first significant success at senior level, winning the Northern League’s 4th Division in 1979 and again in 1986. In 1989, it won the Northern League 3rd division title.
Cambridge (2011 population 126,748) is a city located in Southern Ontario at the confluence of the Grand and Speed rivers in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. It is an amalgamation of the City of Galt, the towns of Preston and Hespeler, and the hamlet of Blair.
Galt covers the largest portion of Cambridge, making up the southern half of the city. Preston and Blair are located on the western side of the city, while Hespeler is in the most northeasterly section of Cambridge.
History
History of the City of Cambridge
Cambridge began as a composite city in 1973, when the City of Galt, Towns of Preston and Hespeler, and the hamlet of Blair were amalgamated.
There was considerable resistance among the local population to this "shotgun marriage" arranged by the provincial government and a healthy sense of rivalry had always governed relations among the three communities. Even today, though many residents will tell the outside world that they call Cambridge home, they will often identify themselves to each other as citizens of Galt or Preston or Hespeler. Each unique centre has its own history that is well documented in the Cambridge City Archives.
To listen to more of Jonathan Miller’s stories, go to the playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFz9vNVkBJ3G3jNc1pNGNbM0
Jonathan Miller (1934-2019) was a British theatre and opera director whose work includes a West End production of "The Merchant of Venice" which starred Laurence Olivier and a modern, Mafia-themed version of "Rigoletto". [Listener: Christopher Sykes; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Now, this may have also been influenced by my membership of a society which I joined in Cambridge. It had… in those days it was a secret society, well, secret, I mean, it was private and not well known, called the Apostles. And I was invited to join the Apostles. So I must’ve attracted someone's attention being amusing and bright in some way, and my future brother-in-...
published: 12 Oct 2017
Guy Burgess: Drunken English Socialite and a Soviet Spy
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with our episode covering the third member of Cambridge Five - Guy Burgess, a Soviet spy and drunken English socialite.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
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#ColdWar #Burgess #CambridgeFive
published: 31 Oct 2020
The University of Cambridge - A brief history with Helen Carr
Join medieval historian, television producer and writer Helen Carr, as she guides us around the Colleges of Cambridge University. Helen brings to life a brief history of one of the world's leading educational institutions, starting with its origins at Peterhouse College and taking in some key parts of the 800-year history.
You will also see for yourself the important role of Cambridge University Press in putting the University on the map. We take a look inside some College buildings and see Cambridge from the sky in a way few people get to experience – join us in this Inspire session to see it all!
published: 08 Sep 2020
Donald MacLean: The First of the Cambridge Five
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the famous Cambridge Five and Donald Maclean in particular - a real Cold War-era spy story
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
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#ColdWar #Maclean #CambridgeFive
published: 27 Jun 2020
Member of Ivy League secret society speaks out
Secret societies are a source of conspiracy theories and blockbusters, but whether or not the legends are true, one thing is certain: they work to elevate their own members above others.
published: 22 Mar 2019
The Twelve Apostles Greek Orthodox Church TV Channel Live!!!
Ζωντανά όλες οι λειτουργίες και όλα τα μυστήρια της Εκκλησίας. Στο κανάλι της Εκκλησιας των 12 Αποστολών στο Hellenic TV και στο Roku box CYTA UK & www.12apostles.co.uk
Welcome to the website of The Twelve Apostles Greek Orthodox Church. The church is one of many Greek Orthodox churches in the United Kingdom. It serves as the spiritual centre for the community of Hertfordshire and beyond. Any visitor to our church will tell you that it is like a little monastery you expect to find at the top of a mountain in Cyprus or Greece.
Our church welcomes worshipers from other Orthodox Christian communities (Greek and non-Greek) and is especially popular with the younger generation who select it for their weddings and baptisms. We are the only Greek Orthodox church in the United Kingdom that broad...
published: 09 Jul 2018
The Cambridge Apostles, 1820 1914 Liberalism, Imagination, and Friendship in British Intellectual an
To listen to more of Jonathan Miller’s stories, go to the playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFz9vNVkBJ3G3jNc1pNGNbM0
Jonathan Miller (1...
To listen to more of Jonathan Miller’s stories, go to the playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFz9vNVkBJ3G3jNc1pNGNbM0
Jonathan Miller (1934-2019) was a British theatre and opera director whose work includes a West End production of "The Merchant of Venice" which starred Laurence Olivier and a modern, Mafia-themed version of "Rigoletto". [Listener: Christopher Sykes; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Now, this may have also been influenced by my membership of a society which I joined in Cambridge. It had… in those days it was a secret society, well, secret, I mean, it was private and not well known, called the Apostles. And I was invited to join the Apostles. So I must’ve attracted someone's attention being amusing and bright in some way, and my future brother-in-law, who has the same surname as I, Karl Miller, who then became Professor of English at University College London, he was a member of the Apostles and he asked me to join. Anyway we used to meet every Sunday night in EM Forster's rooms where he was, I suppose, once every three weeks on a Sunday night, and we'd, you know, one of us would read a paper and then we'd get up on what was called the hearth rug and… one by one and discuss the paper. And I think that meeting a lot of interesting and intelligent people who prided themselves not merely on being serious but being light-hearted and witty with their seriousness, had a great influence on me.
[Q] Can you share a bit more about the Apostles? I mean, the Apostles were people like… Hardy was an Apostle, wasn’t he?
Yes, well, I think that the Apostles had been founded much earlier in the 19th Century by Tennyson and some friends of his, a man called Frederick Denison Maurice, and then it became much more famous retrospectively by its early membership in the 1900s with people like Bertrand Russell, GE Moore, Lytton Strachey and Maynard Keynes and so forth. And then… I mean, then it was secret, or private, at any rate, it wasn’t… you couldn’t join it because you wanted to join it as you could’ve joined other societies, you simply got invited not knowing that it existed.
I was rather surprised to discover that my mother knew about it but she didn’t know about its current existence when I was in Cambridge, she was rather surprised and delighted to hear that I was a member of it for the simple reason that she was at that time engaged in writing rather lengthy essays on (Lord Alfred) Tennyson, and she knew that he had been an Apostle. And, actually, she had a rather interesting and rather original theory about the 'Idylls of the King. She thought that the Round Table, which was described in the 'Idylls of the King', was nothing other than the Apostles.
In fact, I remember walking across Trinity Bridge with her one lunchtime when she came to do some work in the Trinity Library, and we walked across the Trinity Bridge and looked over towards my college, which was St John's where there was this Neo-Gothic new court, and she paused on the bridge and said, look, there is many towered Camelot, and there’s the river winding down to Camelot, and she thought that the relationship between Hallam and Tennyson, they were… both of whom were Apostles, was in the 'Idylls of the King', and she was delighted and surprised to find that her son was part of a society that she was writing about.
To listen to more of Jonathan Miller’s stories, go to the playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFz9vNVkBJ3G3jNc1pNGNbM0
Jonathan Miller (1934-2019) was a British theatre and opera director whose work includes a West End production of "The Merchant of Venice" which starred Laurence Olivier and a modern, Mafia-themed version of "Rigoletto". [Listener: Christopher Sykes; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Now, this may have also been influenced by my membership of a society which I joined in Cambridge. It had… in those days it was a secret society, well, secret, I mean, it was private and not well known, called the Apostles. And I was invited to join the Apostles. So I must’ve attracted someone's attention being amusing and bright in some way, and my future brother-in-law, who has the same surname as I, Karl Miller, who then became Professor of English at University College London, he was a member of the Apostles and he asked me to join. Anyway we used to meet every Sunday night in EM Forster's rooms where he was, I suppose, once every three weeks on a Sunday night, and we'd, you know, one of us would read a paper and then we'd get up on what was called the hearth rug and… one by one and discuss the paper. And I think that meeting a lot of interesting and intelligent people who prided themselves not merely on being serious but being light-hearted and witty with their seriousness, had a great influence on me.
[Q] Can you share a bit more about the Apostles? I mean, the Apostles were people like… Hardy was an Apostle, wasn’t he?
Yes, well, I think that the Apostles had been founded much earlier in the 19th Century by Tennyson and some friends of his, a man called Frederick Denison Maurice, and then it became much more famous retrospectively by its early membership in the 1900s with people like Bertrand Russell, GE Moore, Lytton Strachey and Maynard Keynes and so forth. And then… I mean, then it was secret, or private, at any rate, it wasn’t… you couldn’t join it because you wanted to join it as you could’ve joined other societies, you simply got invited not knowing that it existed.
I was rather surprised to discover that my mother knew about it but she didn’t know about its current existence when I was in Cambridge, she was rather surprised and delighted to hear that I was a member of it for the simple reason that she was at that time engaged in writing rather lengthy essays on (Lord Alfred) Tennyson, and she knew that he had been an Apostle. And, actually, she had a rather interesting and rather original theory about the 'Idylls of the King. She thought that the Round Table, which was described in the 'Idylls of the King', was nothing other than the Apostles.
In fact, I remember walking across Trinity Bridge with her one lunchtime when she came to do some work in the Trinity Library, and we walked across the Trinity Bridge and looked over towards my college, which was St John's where there was this Neo-Gothic new court, and she paused on the bridge and said, look, there is many towered Camelot, and there’s the river winding down to Camelot, and she thought that the relationship between Hallam and Tennyson, they were… both of whom were Apostles, was in the 'Idylls of the King', and she was delighted and surprised to find that her son was part of a society that she was writing about.
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with our episode covering the third member of Cambridge Five - Guy Burgess, a Soviet ...
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with our episode covering the third member of Cambridge Five - Guy Burgess, a Soviet spy and drunken English socialite.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
✔ Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar
✔ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/thecoldwartv
✔ Instagram ►http://www.instagram.com/thecoldwartv
#ColdWar #Burgess #CambridgeFive
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with our episode covering the third member of Cambridge Five - Guy Burgess, a Soviet spy and drunken English socialite.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
✔ Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar
✔ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/thecoldwartv
✔ Instagram ►http://www.instagram.com/thecoldwartv
#ColdWar #Burgess #CambridgeFive
Join medieval historian, television producer and writer Helen Carr, as she guides us around the Colleges of Cambridge University. Helen brings to life a brief h...
Join medieval historian, television producer and writer Helen Carr, as she guides us around the Colleges of Cambridge University. Helen brings to life a brief history of one of the world's leading educational institutions, starting with its origins at Peterhouse College and taking in some key parts of the 800-year history.
You will also see for yourself the important role of Cambridge University Press in putting the University on the map. We take a look inside some College buildings and see Cambridge from the sky in a way few people get to experience – join us in this Inspire session to see it all!
Join medieval historian, television producer and writer Helen Carr, as she guides us around the Colleges of Cambridge University. Helen brings to life a brief history of one of the world's leading educational institutions, starting with its origins at Peterhouse College and taking in some key parts of the 800-year history.
You will also see for yourself the important role of Cambridge University Press in putting the University on the map. We take a look inside some College buildings and see Cambridge from the sky in a way few people get to experience – join us in this Inspire session to see it all!
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the famous Cambridge Five and Donald Maclean in particular - a real C...
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the famous Cambridge Five and Donald Maclean in particular - a real Cold War-era spy story
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
✔ Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar
✔ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/thecoldwartv
✔ Instagram ►http://www.instagram.com/thecoldwartv
#ColdWar #Maclean #CambridgeFive
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the famous Cambridge Five and Donald Maclean in particular - a real Cold War-era spy story
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
✔ Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar
✔ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/thecoldwartv
✔ Instagram ►http://www.instagram.com/thecoldwartv
#ColdWar #Maclean #CambridgeFive
Secret societies are a source of conspiracy theories and blockbusters, but whether or not the legends are true, one thing is certain: they work to elevate their...
Secret societies are a source of conspiracy theories and blockbusters, but whether or not the legends are true, one thing is certain: they work to elevate their own members above others.
Secret societies are a source of conspiracy theories and blockbusters, but whether or not the legends are true, one thing is certain: they work to elevate their own members above others.
Ζωντανά όλες οι λειτουργίες και όλα τα μυστήρια της Εκκλησίας. Στο κανάλι της Εκκλησιας των 12 Αποστολών στο Hellenic TV και στο Roku box CYTA UK & www.12apostl...
Ζωντανά όλες οι λειτουργίες και όλα τα μυστήρια της Εκκλησίας. Στο κανάλι της Εκκλησιας των 12 Αποστολών στο Hellenic TV και στο Roku box CYTA UK & www.12apostles.co.uk
Welcome to the website of The Twelve Apostles Greek Orthodox Church. The church is one of many Greek Orthodox churches in the United Kingdom. It serves as the spiritual centre for the community of Hertfordshire and beyond. Any visitor to our church will tell you that it is like a little monastery you expect to find at the top of a mountain in Cyprus or Greece.
Our church welcomes worshipers from other Orthodox Christian communities (Greek and non-Greek) and is especially popular with the younger generation who select it for their weddings and baptisms. We are the only Greek Orthodox church in the United Kingdom that broadcasts live video (see links above) and caters for online bookings (see link above) for weddings and baptisms. In addition, for weddings, we have authority to perform the civil ceremony at the same time as the religious one.
Ζωντανά όλες οι λειτουργίες και όλα τα μυστήρια της Εκκλησίας. Στο κανάλι της Εκκλησιας των 12 Αποστολών στο Hellenic TV και στο Roku box CYTA UK & www.12apostles.co.uk
Welcome to the website of The Twelve Apostles Greek Orthodox Church. The church is one of many Greek Orthodox churches in the United Kingdom. It serves as the spiritual centre for the community of Hertfordshire and beyond. Any visitor to our church will tell you that it is like a little monastery you expect to find at the top of a mountain in Cyprus or Greece.
Our church welcomes worshipers from other Orthodox Christian communities (Greek and non-Greek) and is especially popular with the younger generation who select it for their weddings and baptisms. We are the only Greek Orthodox church in the United Kingdom that broadcasts live video (see links above) and caters for online bookings (see link above) for weddings and baptisms. In addition, for weddings, we have authority to perform the civil ceremony at the same time as the religious one.
To listen to more of Jonathan Miller’s stories, go to the playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFz9vNVkBJ3G3jNc1pNGNbM0
Jonathan Miller (1934-2019) was a British theatre and opera director whose work includes a West End production of "The Merchant of Venice" which starred Laurence Olivier and a modern, Mafia-themed version of "Rigoletto". [Listener: Christopher Sykes; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Now, this may have also been influenced by my membership of a society which I joined in Cambridge. It had… in those days it was a secret society, well, secret, I mean, it was private and not well known, called the Apostles. And I was invited to join the Apostles. So I must’ve attracted someone's attention being amusing and bright in some way, and my future brother-in-law, who has the same surname as I, Karl Miller, who then became Professor of English at University College London, he was a member of the Apostles and he asked me to join. Anyway we used to meet every Sunday night in EM Forster's rooms where he was, I suppose, once every three weeks on a Sunday night, and we'd, you know, one of us would read a paper and then we'd get up on what was called the hearth rug and… one by one and discuss the paper. And I think that meeting a lot of interesting and intelligent people who prided themselves not merely on being serious but being light-hearted and witty with their seriousness, had a great influence on me.
[Q] Can you share a bit more about the Apostles? I mean, the Apostles were people like… Hardy was an Apostle, wasn’t he?
Yes, well, I think that the Apostles had been founded much earlier in the 19th Century by Tennyson and some friends of his, a man called Frederick Denison Maurice, and then it became much more famous retrospectively by its early membership in the 1900s with people like Bertrand Russell, GE Moore, Lytton Strachey and Maynard Keynes and so forth. And then… I mean, then it was secret, or private, at any rate, it wasn’t… you couldn’t join it because you wanted to join it as you could’ve joined other societies, you simply got invited not knowing that it existed.
I was rather surprised to discover that my mother knew about it but she didn’t know about its current existence when I was in Cambridge, she was rather surprised and delighted to hear that I was a member of it for the simple reason that she was at that time engaged in writing rather lengthy essays on (Lord Alfred) Tennyson, and she knew that he had been an Apostle. And, actually, she had a rather interesting and rather original theory about the 'Idylls of the King. She thought that the Round Table, which was described in the 'Idylls of the King', was nothing other than the Apostles.
In fact, I remember walking across Trinity Bridge with her one lunchtime when she came to do some work in the Trinity Library, and we walked across the Trinity Bridge and looked over towards my college, which was St John's where there was this Neo-Gothic new court, and she paused on the bridge and said, look, there is many towered Camelot, and there’s the river winding down to Camelot, and she thought that the relationship between Hallam and Tennyson, they were… both of whom were Apostles, was in the 'Idylls of the King', and she was delighted and surprised to find that her son was part of a society that she was writing about.
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with our episode covering the third member of Cambridge Five - Guy Burgess, a Soviet spy and drunken English socialite.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
✔ Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar
✔ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/thecoldwartv
✔ Instagram ►http://www.instagram.com/thecoldwartv
#ColdWar #Burgess #CambridgeFive
Join medieval historian, television producer and writer Helen Carr, as she guides us around the Colleges of Cambridge University. Helen brings to life a brief history of one of the world's leading educational institutions, starting with its origins at Peterhouse College and taking in some key parts of the 800-year history.
You will also see for yourself the important role of Cambridge University Press in putting the University on the map. We take a look inside some College buildings and see Cambridge from the sky in a way few people get to experience – join us in this Inspire session to see it all!
Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the famous Cambridge Five and Donald Maclean in particular - a real Cold War-era spy story
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar or Paypal: http://paypal.me/TheColdWar
✔ Merch store ► https://teespring.com/stores/thecoldwar
✔ Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/thecoldwar
✔ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/thecoldwartv
✔ Instagram ►http://www.instagram.com/thecoldwartv
#ColdWar #Maclean #CambridgeFive
Secret societies are a source of conspiracy theories and blockbusters, but whether or not the legends are true, one thing is certain: they work to elevate their own members above others.
Ζωντανά όλες οι λειτουργίες και όλα τα μυστήρια της Εκκλησίας. Στο κανάλι της Εκκλησιας των 12 Αποστολών στο Hellenic TV και στο Roku box CYTA UK & www.12apostles.co.uk
Welcome to the website of The Twelve Apostles Greek Orthodox Church. The church is one of many Greek Orthodox churches in the United Kingdom. It serves as the spiritual centre for the community of Hertfordshire and beyond. Any visitor to our church will tell you that it is like a little monastery you expect to find at the top of a mountain in Cyprus or Greece.
Our church welcomes worshipers from other Orthodox Christian communities (Greek and non-Greek) and is especially popular with the younger generation who select it for their weddings and baptisms. We are the only Greek Orthodox church in the United Kingdom that broadcasts live video (see links above) and caters for online bookings (see link above) for weddings and baptisms. In addition, for weddings, we have authority to perform the civil ceremony at the same time as the religious one.
The origin of the Apostles' nickname dates from the number, twelve, of their founders. Membership consists largely of undergraduates, though there have been graduate student members, and members who already hold university and college posts. The society traditionally drew most of its members from Christ's, St John's, Jesus, Trinity and King's Colleges.
Activities and membership
The society is essentially a discussion group. Meetings are held once a week, traditionally on Saturday evenings, during which one member gives a prepared talk on a topic, which is later thrown open for discussion.
The usual procedure was for members to meet at the rooms of those whose turn it was to present the topic. The host would provide refreshments consisting of coffee and sardines on toast, called "whales". Women first gained acceptance into the society in the 1970s.
... faith, I took him up decades later, after my colleague, the late Charles Provan, began to study the CambridgeUniversity edition of Nietzsche’s works, so as to refute his attack on the Apostle Paul.
Who was that ‘we’, though? Marjorie Garber’s understanding of the group’s membership encompasses Woolf and her siblings, numerous alumni of the Cambridge society known as the Apostles, and their children and friends ... .
... pupil, the philosopher G.E Moore (a descendant of the Quaker branch) and his unofficial role as “pope” of the Cambridge secret debating society, the Apostles ... Moore and the Cambridge Apostles, 1979.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
The Mormon church injected some diversity into what had been an all-white leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
1 The ideological blueprint for this applied science of control was outlined decades earlier in the three volume piece co-written by Russell and his fellow Cambridge Apostle Sir Alfred North Whitehead...
Careless in confession, Lemmey’s narrator leads us from post-first world war youth, fucking with a labourer in a field at harvest-time, to Cambridge, and his membership of the Apostles and his ...