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        <title>Aquinas Institute of Theology</title> 
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    <comments>http://www.ai.edu/AboutUs/PressReleases/tabid/69/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/27/AQUINAS-INSTITUTE-OF-THEOLOGY-STUDENTS-TO-BE-ORDAINED-MAY-10.aspx#Comments</comments> 
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    <title>AQUINAS INSTITUTE OF THEOLOGY STUDENTS TO BE ORDAINED MAY 10</title> 
    <link>http://www.ai.edu/AboutUs/PressReleases/tabid/69/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/27/AQUINAS-INSTITUTE-OF-THEOLOGY-STUDENTS-TO-BE-ORDAINED-MAY-10.aspx</link> 
    <description>One Man Will Be Ordained to the Priesthood
Three Men Will Be Ordained as Transitional Deacons
(ST.LOUIS)Most Reverend Peter Christensen, Bishop of Superior,   Wisconsin, will confer the sacrament of priestly ordination on one   Aquinas Institute of Theology graduate and will ordain four current   Aquinas Institute students to the transitional diaconate during Mass at   St. Francis Xavier (College) Church, Grand and Lindell Boulevards, at 1   p.m. on Sunday, May 10.
Brother Andrew McAlpin, O.P., a 2008 graduate of Aquinas   Institute, will be ordained to the priesthood for the Order of Preachers   (Dominicans).  Dominican Brothers Michail Ford, O.P, and Patrick Tobin, O.P., and Resurrectionist Brother Eric Wagner, C.R.,   will be ordained as transitional deacons who will serve part-time in   parishes over the next year while they complete their studies for the   Roman Catholic priesthood. One of the four, Br. Michail Ford, is a   native of the Archdiocese of St. Louis, and three of the four were   raised in the U.S. Midwest. As a group, the men range in age from 27 to   44.
McAlpin, 44, a native of Eagan, Minnesota, is a U.S. Navy   veteran who worked for nearly nine years at the Honeywell Corporation in   Plymouth, Minnesota, earned a B.A. in Catholic Studies at the   University of St. Thomas in St. Paul in 2001, and served as a parish   Director of Religious Education in the Archdiocese of Minneapolis-St.   Paul before entering the Dominican Order in 2003.  Mc Alpin received a   Master of Divinity (M.Div.) degree from Aquinas Institute in 2008. After   ordination to the priesthood, McAlpin will continue to serve as a   teacher of theology,  director of educational technology and as an   assistant freshman football coach and assistant varsity baseball coach   at Fenwick (Catholic) High School in River Forest, IL (a suburb of   Chicago).
Ford, 42, a native of Florissant, Missouri, earned a Bachelor   of Science in Business Administration (B.S.B.A.) degree with a major in   Management from the University of Central Missouri in Warrensburg,   Missouri in 1993, and worked for ten years as a manager for D.L. Cole   and Associates in St. Louis before entering the Dominican Order.  While   he finishes his graduate studies at Aquinas Institute, he will continue   to minister part-time at St. Justin Martyr Catholic Parish in Sunset   Hills, Missouri, and to serve as a chaplain for the St. Louis   Metropolitan Police Department.
Tobin, 34, spent part of his young life in Virginia, received a   Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in chemistry in 1997 from the University of   Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia, and was active in parish   life and the Knights of Columbus in Ann Arbor, Michigan, while   completing studies for both a Master of Science (M.S.) and a doctoral   (Ph.D.) degree in chemistry from the University if Michigan. Tobin   entered the Dominican Order in 2003, and while he completes his graduate   studies at Aquinas Institute, he will minister part-time at St. Pius V   Parish in St. Louis.
Wagner, 27, a native of Woodstock, Illinois, who entered the   Congregation for the Resurrection (Resurrectionists) in 2001, earned a   Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Architecture degree from Washington   University before beginning his priestly studies at Aquinas Institute of   Theology in 2005. Since beginning his formation for the priesthood, his   pastoral ministry placements have included service as a confirmation   catechist and youth ministry assistant within the Diocese of Rockford   and more recently as a campus ministry intern at Washington University   and as a student chaplain at St. Louis University Hospital in St. Louis.
Aquinas Institute of Theology is a Roman Catholic graduate school of   theology and ministry sponsored by the Dominican Order. Impelled by the   Catholic faith and the Dominican mission, Aquinas Institute of Theology   educates men and women to preach, to teach, to minister and to lead, and   is the only Catholic institution in the world offering a Doctorate in   preaching.  While most students are Catholic, Protestants also study at   Aquinas Institute. Students represent communities that stretch from   coast to coast, and from as far away as Africa and South America.</description> 
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    <pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2009 16:05:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>48 to Graduate at Aquinas Institute of Theology</title> 
    <link>http://www.ai.edu/AboutUs/PressReleases/tabid/69/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/28/48-to-Graduate-at-Aquinas-Institute-of-Theology.aspx</link> 
    <description>Scripture Scholar and St. Louis Native to Serve as Commencement Speaker
Aquinas Institute of Theology will confer graduate degrees and   graduate certificates on 48 women and men in a commencement ceremony at   7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 8, at St. Francis Xavier (“College”) Church,   Grand and Lindell Boulevards.  St. Louis native Fr. Benedict Thomas   Viviano, O.P., professor emeritus at the University of Fribourg   (Switzerland), will be the commencement speaker.  The commencement is   open to the public.
Of the 48 students graduating, 11 will receive a Doctor of Ministry   (D.Min.) degree in Preaching; 2 will receive a Master of Divinity   (M.Div.) degree; 8 will receive a Master of Arts (M.A.) in Theology   degree; 19 will receive a Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies (M.A.P.S.)   degree; 2 will receive the dual M.A.P.S./Master of Social Work (M.S.W.)   degrees; 4 students will receive Graduate Certificates in Spiritual   Direction and 2 will receive Graduate Certificates in Spiritual   Direction with the M.A.P.S. degree.  The graduates include 43 lay   students and 5 members of religious communities.
In addition to the conferral of academic degrees, Aquinas Institute   of Theology will award honorary degrees (Doctor of Humane Letters) to   the following individuals:

    Benedict Thomas Viviano, O.P., Professor Emeritus, University   of Fribourg (Switzerland). Father Viviano, a member of the Chicago   Province of the Dominican Order, is a New Testament scholar and author.   Prior to retirement in 2008, Father Viviano taught for 11 years at Ecole   Biblique, for 12 years at Aquinas Institute of Theology, and was a   professor of New Testament at the University of Fribourg where he taught   since 1995. Father has also served as vice president of the Tantur   Ecumenical Institute for Theological Studies (Jerusalem). Best known for   his book The Kingdom of God in History, Father Viviano is also the   author of the St. Matthew section of the New Jerome Biblical Commentary.
     Mary Antona Ebo, F.S.M., Founding Member and Past President,   National Black Sisters Conference.  One of the first three African   American women to enter the Franciscan Sisters of Mary, Sister Ebo has   earned degrees in medical records administration, hospital executive   development and theology.  A former Catholic hospital executive   director, Sister also worked for six years as a chaplain at the   University of Mississippi Medical Center. She has also served on the   Human Rights Commission for the Archdiocese of St. Louis, and was   awarded the Heschel-King Award by St. Louis Jews for Justice. In 2000,   Sister Ebo received the Living Legend Award from the State of Alabama   where, in 1965, she courageously marched in support of civil rights for   all Americans.
    Suzanne Noffke, O.P., Catherinian Scholar and Author.  A   member of the Dominican Community of Racine Wisconsin, Sister Noffke   earned a doctorate in general linguistics from the University of   Wisconsin  Madison, and is currently affiliated with the Department of   History of the University of WisconsinParkside, as a Scholar in   Residence. Sister Noffke has been immersed in the life and thought of   Catherine of Siena for more than 30 years, and has  published   translations all of Catherine’s works as well as numerous essays on the   saint, and has lectured widely and conducted retreats based on the life   and thought of Saints Catherine and Dominic.
    Carol Williams, M.D., Physician and Former Member of Aquinas   Institute Board of Trustees.  Dr. Williams’ active practice of medicine   spanned 40 years and encompassed general obstetrics and gynecology,   gynecologic-oncology, pediatric and adolescent gynecology, and provision   of women’s health services in community heath and public settings. She   has held staff memberships at Barnes and Allied Hospitals, St. Luke’s   Hospital (where she was chief of the Department of   Obstetrics-Gynecology), and St. Louis Children’s and Cardinal Glennon   Hospitals.  She is a past president of the St. Louis Metropolitan   Medical Society and the Missouri State Medical Association, and served   on the Missouri State Board of Registration for the Healing Arts. Dr.   Williams completed a M.A.P.S. degree and graduate certificates in   Pastoral Care, Spiritual Direction, and Preaching at Aquinas Institute.

Aquinas Institute of Theology, sponsored by the Order of Preachers   (Dominicans), is the only Catholic institution in the world offering a   Doctorate in preaching. While most students are Catholic, Protestants   also study at Aquinas Institute. Students represent communities that   stretch from coast to coast, and from as far away as Africa and South   America.</description> 
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    <pubDate>Fri, 08 May 2009 16:07:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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