276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Gateshead Revisited [LP]

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Close by, Foster and Partners' Gateshead Music Centre is being inflated on the riverbank. At least, that's what it looks like. The curvaceous building is made from concrete, steel and aluminium, but looks as though it has been pumped up - architecture's answer to Charles Atlas or Jayne Mansfield. In other lights it resembles a giant dirigible moored to the banks of the Tyne. Either way, it will be unmissable. Huge windows will provide views of Newcastle's city centre. Inside, airy foyers and filigree walkways will lead to a 1,650-seat auditorium, a secondary concert hall, a music school and rehearsal rooms. The centre will be home not just to Northern Sinfonia, but also to Folkworks, a charity promoting traditional music. The cultural quarter on Gateshead Quays will, of course, be the jewel in the crown of the regeneration. Yet Barford claims: “We didn’t start with the big picture for a cultural complex. We did it incrementally. An organizing committee, whose members are participating in a personal capacity and who come from different Catholic entities (such as the blogs, Messainlatino and Campari & de Maistre, and the associations, National Committee on Summorum Pontificum and the St Michael the Archangel Association), wished to make public their profound attachment to the traditional Mass at a time when its extinction seems to be planned. They do so out of love for the Pope, so that he might be paternally opened to understanding those liturgical peripheries that no longer feel welcome in the Church, because they find in the traditional liturgy the full and complete expression of the entire Catholic Faith. The details of the bridge are impressive. The steel pedestrian walkways include benches, and are raised above the perforated aluminium cycle path to offer generous views of the Tyne and its twin cities. The bridge can be raised and lowered, all but silently, in just four minutes. It is expected to be opened about 200 times a year, a sight well worth seeing. By night it lights up beautifully.

centuries, he is not doing his job and as such, and cannot access the gift of infallibility given by God for the right use of the office, whichThe gallery, first mooted in 1992 in a report by Sandy Nairne and Graham Marchant, will incorporate working studios for artists and is scheduled to hold some of the most ambitious art shows of the next few years. Yet there's still evidence of Gateshead's ironclad engineering tradition in the approach to the borough, which is marked by Antony Gormley's vast ferro-oxide sculpture, the Angel of the North. Its wingspan rivals that of a Boeing 747. Ground 3 challenged that reasoning. It argued – in essence – that it could not be assumed that the Secretary of State would comply with his net zero duty. The High Court, at ¶144 noted that the critical part of the Panel’s reasoning was that the net zero duty rested upon the Secretary of State making decisions for the United Kingdom as a whole. Here, however, the Secretary of State was dealing with an individual planning application in a particular local authority. The CCA duty essentially lay in the higher realm of national policymaking; not – as here – local decision making. National vs local decision-making. To require a local planning authority to consider whether the Secretary of State would or would not be able to comply with its obligations under the CCA 2008 would lead them an area of national policy, with which they are not directly concerned. The good news is our bishop, Robert Byrne, who is very sympathetic to the TLM. Masses will continue at St Joseph`s on Saturdays and Sundays. On holy days too I expect and for funerals and other sacraments.

Michael Rhimes is a barrister at Francis Taylor Building specialising in environmental, planning and public law.At the same time, there is the worry of the new Vatican document seeking to rein in the Extraordinary Form. The last I heard on this was that it was leaving things as they are but any priest new to the EF must get the permission of his bishop to celebrate.This didn`t sound too bad to me if it means the bishop has to set some kind of test to ensure that new celebrants are proficient in the rite. This could mean setting up training courses to ensure proficiency and thus make it easier for priests to learn who are worried about trying it because they have no Latin for example. At least that`s what I hope will happen. I am at the moment re-editing a film I took of the summer fayre in 1989. You may have seen it in the past, in fact, I bet you are in it, as are many of the parishioners at around that time. Starting this morning, and lasting for 15 days, several dozen billboards dedicated to the traditional liturgy will be posted near and around the Vatican. For this reason, the attitude of rejection with which their own pastors are forced to treat these communities today is not only reason for bitter sorrow, which these faithful strive to offer for the purification of the Church, but also constitutes a grave injustice. In the face of this injustice, charity itself demands that we not remain silent: for “indiscreet silence leaves in error those who might have been instructed” (Pope St Gregory the Great, Pastoral Rule, Book II, chapter 4). The Gateshead principle is now enshrined in NPPF, paragraph 188. The Decision summarised that paragraph as follows:

Yes Anonymous, Father Donnelly was a wonderful man and priest. I particularly remember attending a celebratory mass for his silver jubilee.suffering, dying world as one of us; came to suffer and die with us and for us, that He may rise again The International Stadium in Gateshead, directly across the River Tyne from Newcastle in the north-east of England, last staged a one-day showpiece event in 2010. The Aviva British Grand Prix, one of the inaugural season Diamond League meetings, featured a UK debut by one of the all-time greats from halfway round the planet. New Zealand’s big shot Valerie Adams won the shot put with a heave of 20.06m.

Second, Gateshead is not a principle of blind faith. The Panel’s decision needs to be understood in context. All accepted that carbon emissions were a material planning consideration. The Panel noted that the consequence of granting permission was that it would make it more difficult to comply with the net zero duty. However, on the evidence before it, the “comparative magnitude of the increase [in emissions] was limited”. The Gateshead principle is highly fact sensitive. It might very well be rebutted and does not require a decision-maker to adopt a sanguine attitude towards the net zero strategy or the importance of reducing emissions. But the fact remains that that duty lies – as the Panel explained – elsewhere.The restriction on new celebrants having to have authorisation from Rome seems bizarre. How will Rome know anything about the suitability of the priest? Interesting that there is a major role in all this for archbishop Arthur Roche, the new head of the Congregation for Divine Worship. In his younger days he was private secretary to bishop William Gordon Wheeler, the bishop of Leeds (1966-1985) and, at the time the bishop in England most sympathetic to the cause to save the TLM. I remember Arthur coming to the English College in Rome in 1991 to get a licence ( ecclesiastical degree) so he could be advanced. Arthur`s rise to power has been remarkable but he has not always been known for pastoral sensitivity as when during his time as bishop of Leeds parishes were closed. In 2008 Roche's plans to close seven parishes produced vigorous protests, especially on the part of a parish in Allerton Bywater that offered a Latin Mass. I suspect we are in for a rough ride. take etc. What an adventure you are embarking upon! Bear in mind that once the romance of today wears off and the reality God of surprises”, for God is unchanging and has no surprises up His sleeve: “ Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever” Waitz was not finished with Gateshead. In 1984 and 1988, she returned to Tyneside to win the Great North Run, passing the International Stadium at the three mile point of Foster’s famed half-marathon.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment