85 percent Catholic at CoI College
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Culzie | Date: Tuesday, 2013-05-14, 11:11 PM | Message # 1 |
Generalissimo
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| Billy Kennedy News Letter Monday,May 13,2013 MOST OF FULL-TIME STAFF AT CoI COLLEGE ARE CATHOLICS,REVEALS ARCHBISHOP The Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin the Rev Dr Michael Jackson has confirmed that a large majority of full-time staff and students at the Church of Ireland college of education in the Republic are drawn from the Roman Catholic community. ''They shape the learning environment for all who contribute to its life and education input and output'' he said,speaking during the synod's education debate. The bishop confirmed that 85 per cent of full-time staff at the college are members of the majority Roman Catholic community in the Republic,as are 75 per cent of the students admitted to the courses in the college.
Ulster Protestants consider themselves to be a separate nation. This nation they call Ulster
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RSAUB | Date: Thursday, 2013-05-16, 4:50 PM | Message # 2 |
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| Unfortunately this is what happens when you don't have the numbers to sustain yourselves, you end up being bred out a lesson we in Ulster should have learnt by now.
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Culzie | Date: Thursday, 2013-05-16, 6:35 PM | Message # 3 |
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| Yes, and I think also, its all a part of the ecumenical movement. These things take a long while to work their way though the system and become acceptable to the masses. I think it was 1960/61 when the Archbishop of Canterbury made the first ever visit to the pope in Rome. The first ever since the Reformation. It was not long after that the moves towards a United States of Europe started and its taken around 40 or 50 years to get to where we are today. Is the same happening on the island of Ireland? What will IT be like in 40 or 50 years? We've only to look at the present bunch we have at Stormont and their toadying. They've got their money and it seems that's all they were ever interested in.
Ulster Protestants consider themselves to be a separate nation. This nation they call Ulster
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