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❤️ Nice Guys (album) 🦐

":For the 2005 film of the same name, see Nice Guys Nice Guys is a 1979 album by the Art Ensemble of Chicago, their first to appear on the ECM label.Art Ensemble of Chicago discography accessed 22, July, 2009Jazzlists: Art Ensemble Of Chicago discography, accessed November 26, 2017ECM Records Catalog: 1100 series, accessed November 26, 2017ECM Records Catalogue, accessed November 26, 2017 Reception The Allmusic review by Al Campbell awarded the album 4½ stars noting that "Nice Guys was the first Art Ensemble of Chicago album released after a five-year recording hiatus and the group's first for the ECM label. During those five years, the Art Ensemble toured Europe and continued to expand its compositional, improvisational, and theatrical jazz fundamentals, captured abundantly on Nice Guys... the album reveals how the AEC managed to turn individual compositions into a fully realized, surprisingly accessible, avant garde group collective".Campbell, A. Allmusic Review accessed July 27, 2011. Down Beat critic Art Lange writes that Nice Guys, while not the Art Ensemble's best album, "is possibly their most representative, a variegated showcase illustrating much of what they do best."The Penguin Guide to Jazz awarded the album 3 stars out of 4 stating "'much of the music seems almost formulaic, the improvisation limited". Track listing # "Ja" (Lester Bowie) – 8:43 # "Nice Guys" (Roscoe Mitchell) – 1:45 # "Folkus" (Don Moye) – 11:03 # "597–59" (Joseph Jarman) – 6:46 # "CYP" (Mitchell) – 4:53 # "Dreaming of the Master" (Jarman) – 11:40 Personnel *Lester Bowie: trumpet, celeste, bass drum *Malachi Favors Maghostut: bass, percussion instruments, melodica *Joseph Jarman: saxophones, clarinets, percussion instruments, vocal *Roscoe Mitchell: saxophones, clarinets, flute, percussion instruments *Don Moye: drums, percussion, vocal References Category:1979 albums Category:ECM Records albums Category:Art Ensemble of Chicago albums Category:Albums produced by Manfred Eicher "

❤️ Caulanthus hallii 🦐

"Caulanthus hallii is a species of flowering plant in the family Brassicaceae known by the common name Hall's wild cabbage. Distribution It is native to southern California and northern Baja California. It grows in the Colorado Desert (western Sonoran Desert), Mojave Desert sky islands, and the dry eastern Peninsular Ranges slopes. Description Caulanthus hallii is an annual herb producing a hollow stem fringed at the base with long, deeply cut leaves which are hairless or sometimes bristly. The greenish yellow flower has a coat of hairy sepals over narrow, pale petals. The fruit is a silique up to about 11 centimeters long. External links *Jepson Manual Treatment of Caulanthus hallii *USDA Plants Profile for Caulanthus hallii *Caulanthus hallii — U.C. Photo gallery hallii Category:Flora of California Category:Flora of Baja California Category:Flora of the California desert regions Category:Flora of the Sonoran Deserts Category:Natural history of the Mojave Desert Category:Natural history of the Peninsular Ranges Category:Plants described in 1923 "

❤️ Joint International Commission for Theological Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church 🦐

"Pope Francis & Patriarch Bartholomew The Joint International Commission for Theological Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church was established by the Holy See and 14 autocephalous Orthodox churches. Plenary sessions The commission's first ten years of work reflected the growing consensus between the two communions and saw the publication of three agreed statements on such issues as the relationship between the Trinity, the Church and Eucharist; the sacraments of initiation and the connection between common faith and sacramental communion; and the theology of the ordained ministry. The commission has held the following plenary sessions: * 1st Patmos & Rhodes, Greece (1980) "The Mystery of the Church and the Eucharist in the Light of the Mystery of the Holy Trinity" * 2nd Munich, Germany (June 30 to July 6, 1982) "The Mystery of the Church and the Eucharist in the Light of the Mystery of the Holy Trinity" * 3rd Crete, Greece (1984) "Faith, Sacraments and Unity of the Church" * 4th Bari, Italy (June 9–16, 1987) "Faith, Sacraments and the Unity of the Church" * 5th Valamo, Finland (June 19–27, 1988) "The Sacrament of Order in the Sacramental Structure of the Church, with Particular Reference to the Importance of the Apostolic Succession for the Sanctification and Unity of the People of God" * 6th Freising, Germany (1990) "Uniatism" * 7th Balamand, Lebanon (June 17–24, 1993) "Uniatism: Method of Union of the Past, and Present Search for Full Communion" * 8th Emmitsburg, Maryland, US (July 9–19, 2000)"Ecclesiological and Canonical Implications of Uniatism" * 9th Belgrade, Serbia (2006) "The Ecclesiological and Canonical Consequences of the Sacramental Nature of the Church; Conciliarity and Authority in the Church at Three Levels of Ecclesial Life: Local, Regional and Universal" * 10th Ravenna, Italy (October 8–14, 2007)"The Ecclesiological and Canonical Consequences of the Sacramental Nature of the Church – Ecclesial Communion, Conciliarity and Authority" * 11th Paphos, Cyprus (2009) "The Role of the Bishop of Rome in the Communion of the Church in the First Millennium" * 12th Vienna, Austria (2010) "The Role of the Bishop of Rome in the Communion of the Church in the First Millennium" * 13th Amman, Jordan (2014) "Primacy and synodality in the Church" * 14th Chieti, Italy (2016) "Primacy and synodality in the Church" Seventh Plenary Session (Balamand, Lebanon) The seventh plenary session took place from June 17 to 24th, 1993. According to the Communique, also known as the Balamand declaration, the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the attendant collapse of the Warsaw Pact in Central and Eastern Europe brought about "profound changes... involving the rebirth of religious liberty and the resumption of open pastoral activity by the Oriental Catholic Churches". The session declared that these changes had "made these questions the touchstone of the quality of the relations between the Catholic and the Orthodox Churches." In particular, the question of Uniatism became the focus of attention. Eighth Plenary Session (Emmitsburg, United States) The eighth plenary session took place from July 9 to 19th, 2000 and centered on the theme of the "Ecclesiological and Canonical Implications of Uniatism" Ninth Plenary Session (Belgrade, Serbia) The ninth plenary session of the commission was held from 18 September to 25 September 2006 in Belgrade, Serbia. The theme discussed was "Conciliarity and Authority in the Church". Following the session, Pope Benedict XVI visited Patriarch Bartholomew at Phanar on 30 November 2006. Tenth Plenary Session (Ravenna, Italy) The tenth meeting took place in Ravenna, Italy from October 8 to 14th, 2007. See also * Eastern Orthodox – Roman Catholic ecclesiastical differences * Eastern Orthodox – Roman Catholic theological differences * Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity References External links * Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity * Pontifical Oriental Institute * Dialogue with the Orthodox Churches of Byzantine Tradition * Commission on Catholic-Orthodox Unity Set To Resume * Catholic, Orthodox Churches To Unite? * Ecumenical talks reach partial accord on papal primacy November 14, 2007 * The Role of the Bishop of Rome in the Communion of the Church in the First Millennium Crete, 2008 * Bishop Hilarion Alfeyev: Prospects of Orthodox- Catholic Relations * Catholic, Orthodox report promising progress on unity Reuters, Sep 24, 2010 * Catholic, Orthodox Move Toward Unity Reuters, 27 September 2010 * Met. Hilarion: No “breakthroughs” in Vienna September 27, 2010 * Catholic-Orthodox talks on papacy: officials optimistic, while Moscow denies breakthrough September 28, 2010 Category:Catholic–Eastern Orthodox ecumenism "

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