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Father Patrick Posey, rector of the Cathedral of St. Thomas More in Arlington, blessed a new design lab for pre-K through eighth grade students at St. Thomas More Cathedral School Nov. 18. The dedicated facility will provide a central location for innovative technology where students can collaborate on STEM projects and expand their critical thinking skills.
Catholicism has always been an intellectual religion.
Father Michael G. Taylor, pastor, celebrated an outdoor Mass Nov. 9 at the recently cleared site of the new Corpus Christi Catholic Church in South Riding. The Mass was celebrated on the future spot of the church’s altar. One of the many large rocks that had been dug up during the clearing was used as a place marker and centerpiece for the makeshift altar.
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen will be beatified Dec. 21, Bishop Daniel R. Jenky of Peoria announced late Nov. 18.
The poor are the church's treasure because they give every Christian a chance to "speak the same language as Jesus, that of love," Pope Francis said, celebrating Mass for the World Day of the Poor.
Bishop Burbidge commemorates World Day of the Poor by praying with and witnessing the charitable works of Sterling Catholics.
A simple, sensible, and humane solution does exist: Provide a path to legalization and citizenship for those eligible for DACA, and at the same time enact meaningful measures to strengthen border security.
Follow-up to the 2009 horror-comedy combination charts the further adventures of the original's central quartet — Jesse Eisenberg's amiable nebbish, Woody Harrelson's macho gunman, Emma Stone's commitment-averse loner and her fancy-free sibling, played by Abigail Breslin — as they continue to fight for survival in a post-apocalyptic world overrun by flesh-craving zombies. When Breslin's character and her new hippie boyfriend (Avan Jogia) suddenly depart on a road trip to Elvis Presley's Graceland, the remaining trio, fearing for her safety, embarks on a quest to catch up with her.
Long-overdue but flawed drama chronicling the exploits of the most famous conductor on the Underground Railroad, Maryland-born Harriet Tubman (Cynthia Erivo). When her owner (Mike Marunde) dies suddenly and his son (Joe Alwyn) threatens to sell her South, she successfully escapes. Connecting with other abolitionists (including Leslie Odom Jr. and Janelle Monae), she takes numerous trips back across the Pennsylvania border hoping to liberate her family and others.
Occasionally effective horror story about a haunted phone app that tells victims exactly when they'll die.


