The Radium Terrors by Albert Dorrington

By Albert Dorrington

Excerpt from The Radium Terrors

Tony Hackett, a small, Cherubic guy with wheat-red hair and unsure eyes, was once seated close to the fireplace. Renwick's phrases brought on a listening blindness to cloud his look. He answered with out taking a look up on the younger guy beside him.

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Vol. xxxiv (1941), pp. 13-94. 19 THE FRIARS AND THE UNIVERSITY: I225-I306 community should have always one friar as a lecturer, and one in training to take his place when the time came. The choice of those who were to be trained at the Universities was in the hands of the Provincial Chapters, while the friars thus selected were known as studentes de debito. This, however, was not intended to prevent any individual convent from sending one or more of its men to the University if it could afford to do so.

Little says: It looks as if the position of the Faculty of Theology at Cambridge were not firmly established, and the rulers of the Franciscan Province of England were strengthening it by sending a succession of their most experienced and distinguished members, who already had they're ubique docendi, as teachers. The practice continued down to about 1300; to that time about one-third of the Cambridge Masters of the Friars Minor were already graduates in theology of other universities. 5 If this was the policy of the authorities in the Order there seems no doubt that it was successful, for at the close of the thirteenth century the faculty of theology at Cambridge seems to have 1 Little and Pelster, Oxford Theology and Theologians, pp.

But the church was still standing, and the University authorities saw no reason why it should not still be used for their functions. 3 The church was probably built on the model of most Franciscan churches, without transepts but with a long and spacious choir and nave. The nave had at least one aisle and almost certainly had two. There is no record of when it was built, but in 1267 an incident took place which makes it appear that the church, or at any rate a part of it, was then in use. In that year a chaplain of Barnwell had been expelled and excommunicated by the Prior.

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The Radium Terrors by Albert Dorrington
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