Zoids: From Notre Dame Magazine
“On campus for their own reunion were the “Zoids” from Grace Hall. Mike Chanatry, Tom Arkwright, Steve Keller, Gerard Martin, Bob Mazzacavallo, Tom Natale, Bill Roberts, Jeremy Youngblood and the children of the late R. Chris Sullivan had a great time and vowed to reunite text year at the Georgia Tech game”
Arkwright is a school administrator. Called him “Ark the narc” at the time.
Keller was from Oklahoma. He had a brother with the nickname “Dung”
Gerard is a retired surgeon.
Bill lived in Portland for awhile. I went to his wedding. We call him Punxsutawney Bill after the groundhog Phil. That’s where Bill is from. He returned home to PA.
Mazz was an engineer for GM, I think. Crashed cars for a living.
Natale (Nats) was an engineer for a steel manufacturer.
Youngblood was an orthodontic surgeon.
R. Chris was almost a brother. He was in my wedding party. His nickname was “Bad Bob” from the film “The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean”. He died of heart failure some years ago. Best foosball player I ever saw.
https://magazine.nd.edu/issues/2014/...s-notes/1970s/
So you can copy and past. Proves nothing other than that lol.
I am currently taking an online class on the historicity of Jesus of Nazareth, offered by prominent religious historian at University of North Carolina.
Qualifications: This professor is The Bowman and Gordon Gray Professor of Religious Studies at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. With degrees from Wheaton College (B.A.) and Princeton Theological Seminary (M.Div. and Ph.D., magna cum laude), he taught at Rutgers for four years before moving to UNC in 1988.
This is a direct quote from his course guidebook.
"One of the most certain facts of history is that Jesus was crucified on orders of the Roman prefect of Judea, Pontius Pilate."
There must have been Roman patricians ('aristocrats?) very different from the ones I study in Latin if they could manage an intellectual effort of this calibre, inventing the novel, revolutionising religion and understanding a colonial culture for no very evident profit. 'Rumoresque senes severiorum/omnes aestimemus asis', if my memory still functions!
Cypress (04-24-2019)
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