Sunday, January 23, 2011

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ACR joyful journey in vivo






AM

A ping pong tournament and 'Oratorio was performed in the day when we commemorate Blessed Laura Vicugna, January 22.
The contestants were the young men of Bijighir, Barazza, Margineni, Traian, our Oratory and others to other parishes. Their joy and happiness has enlivened the whole morning the Oratory. Besides the small table tennis champions have also seen those that started with so much hope this sport, but who do not yet know the practical and strict rules. A game for them, for everyone. The solemn ceremony with a certificate of participation has closed on the excellent program.

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Oratorio







The boys after school "Centru de zi" after a period of reading exercises have been examining the race with prizes for the best. Gathered in the room oratory have demonstrated the ability to 'read for classes. The best are then performed in front of the jury individually. Having chosen the best and 'followed the joyous ceremony.

The activity 'has been motivated by the desire of parents who had expressed their displeasure realizing that the children were deserting the reading of good books systematically preferring television.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

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Preparing the feast of Don Bosco



On January 31, will 'the feast of Don Bosco Salesian worldwide. Even here in Bacau
us Salesians are preparing this feast with trepidation and hope. Why
'"with trepidation and hope "?...


Projects
Our Communities' is now engaged in the struggles of every day: apostolate, school, youth welfare and their education, sports, basic oratory, prayer, manual work, ... with joy and sacrifice, but it 'also undertaken to carry out some projects supported by Caritas Europe and Italian. It 'a crucial time for setting the future through the implementation of courses for plumbers and electricians and installers of activity' manuals that may affect the way kids in training. We must be able to give a determined 'operation and also economic security to our lives here in Romania. Then trust in prayer and sympathy for all those who have always loved and supported.
Best wishes to you all with hope and joy in the Lord. And good feast of Don Bosco (31 January). D. Sergio.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

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Discoveries in Jerusalem, the baths of the legion, which destroyed the temple

A pool built 1800 years ago was discovered in the Jewish Quarter of Old Jerusalem, during archaeological excavations for the construction of a mikveh (Jewish ritual bath). Broke the news of the Israel Antiquities Authority, as reported by the site Israele.net citing the "Jerusalem Post. The Israel Antiquities Authority, who led the excavations at the initiative of the Jerusalem municipality and Moriah Company for the Development of Jerusalem, explained that the pool was part of a thermal structure used by the Roman X Legion, the same as in 70 AD conquered Jerusalem and destroyed the Second Jewish Temple. The discovery sheds new light on Aelia Capitolina, the city that was built on the ruins of the Temple and Jerusalem in the first century by redesigning the look of the ancient city.
"We were surprised to discover an ancient spa just below the point where it will build a mikveh," said Ofer Sion, excavation director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority. "The thermal structure of the tiles on which are engraved the symbols of the Legio X Fretensis (Leg X Fr), were found in situ and appears to have been used to cover a water channel cut into the rock at the bottom of the pool. Hundreds of terracotta tiles of the roof were found on the floor of the pool indicate that it was a covered structure. " "Apparently - continued Sion - the pool was used by soldiers who were stationed in the city after having suppressed the Jewish revolt of Bar Kochba in 135 AD, when in fact it was founded the Roman city of Aelia Capitolina. We know that the camp of the Tenth Legion was located within the limits of what is now the Old City, probably in the area of \u200b\u200bthe Armenian Quarter. This hypothesis is supported by the discovery of the pool in the adjacent Jewish Quarter, which shows that a large number of soldiers scattered and was also active outside the camp, in other parts of the Old Town. "
"Another interesting finding that has aroused emotion during the excavations - said Zion - is the paw print of a dog that probably belonged to one of the soldiers. The paw print is printed on the symbol of the Legion on one of tile: it could have happened accidentally or have been made in jest. "
Yuval Baruch, archaeologist with the Israel Antiquities Authority for the district of Jerusalem, stressed the importance of the discovery that will contribute significantly to the study of the city of Jerusalem after its destruction by the Romans. "Despite the extensive archaeological excavations carried out in the Jewish Quarter, said Baruch, had been discovered so far not even a building directly attributable to the Roman legion. The absence of such a finding had led to the conclusion that Aelia Capitolina, the city incorporated after the Roman destruction of Jerusalem, was small and limited area. This new discovery, together with other recent years, shows that the city was considerably larger than previously thought. "
'The information is valuable to Aelia Capitolina-continued-Baruch and can make a major contribution to research about Jerusalem, so that the city was designed to determine the character and general appearance of ancient Jerusalem and the Old Town as the know today. The shape of that city subsequently given the profile of its walls and the locations of ports used even to this day. " The Israel Antiquities Authority announced that it will incorporate the remains of thermal baths in the project to the new ritual bath (mikveh).

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China, found a "archeozuppa" bone broth than 2,500 years old

A soup aged for two and a half millennia could not jump out in China, a country that already boasts one of the specialties, delicacies daring for Western palates, such as "century-old egg", and left to ferment for months before being served. The soup in question, however, is a extraordinary archaeological discovery.
has been dug up, tells the Chinese newspaper Global Times during the extension work in Xian Xianyang International Airport, city of Shaanxi province is famous for another archaeological find, the terracotta army of Emperor Qin Shi Huang. The soup, 2,400 years old, was in a bronze pot with three feet, nine inches high and sealed, the support of a tomb: it is a greenish liquid - those who should have been according to archaeologists oxidation of the metal - which they are immersed in some of the bones. In another bronze container was also found almost a liter of a liquid that may be odorless and translucent wine.
The "lunch" period is now in the hands of specialists who will identify the ingredients. In Chinese newspaper an archaeologist of the team that discovered the cauldron, Liu Daiyun, said that "this is the first discovery of a soup bone in the history of archeology Chinese," and that the discovery could help to better understand "the eating habits in the Warring States Period, "because the tomb could belong to a low-ranking military of that era.
decidedly more conservative the vice-principal of the school of Archaeology in Beijing, Zhao Huacheng, which calls for waiting for the results of the tests, because the liquid in the container may have infiltrated from the outside.
The "soup" of Xian is the latest proposal for an archaeological menu "in recent months China has seen the protagonist. Also in Shaanxi province in 2002 was found a "waiver" of fruit, which contain hundreds of seeds of apricots, melons and plums, the results of 3000 years old by carbon dating 14. And in October, the Journal of Archaeological Science published a study of the tombs in the necropolis of Subeixi, Xinjiang, dating back some 2,500 years ago. Along with more features mummies from Eastern European, archaeologists have found, almost intact, even their lunch: noodles and cakes of millet.

on ilGiornale

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Archaeology: navigation began 130,000 years ago

Man began to sail in the Mediterranean at least 130,000 years ago, or over 100,000 years earlier than we knew until today.
is what emerges from research conducted in Crete by a team of American and Greek archaeologists led by Prof. Thomas Strasser from the University of Providence, and which seem capable of revolutionizing the whole of human history. As announced today, the Hellenic Ministry of Culture in a statement, archaeologists have unearthed near 'a high marine terraces "and dating back at least 130,000 years ago, stone tools in two areas of Crete that date back to between 130,000 and 700,000 years ago and are the earliest indirect evidence of a human browsing, at least from the Mediterranean island and the mainland. Until now the oldest sailing in the Mediterranean was traced back to 12,000 years before Christ. Ana The Agency, in reporting the discovery, quotes a member of the team of archaeologists, Professor Curtis Runnels, whereby if the inhabitants of Crete were able to cross the Mediterranean 130,000 years ago, one can imagine that could also make trips beyond the Mediterranean.

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Iran discovered in south-eastern city '5 thousand

Iranian archaeologists have discovered in the south-east of the country the remains of a city that dates back over five thousand years ago. The Fars news agency reported, explaining that the discovery was made by chance during the construction of a building project in the region Khajeh Askar, near the city of Bam, Kerman province. "Part of the ruins was unfortunately damaged during the excavation - the archaeologist said Nader Soleimani Alidade - The artifacts found at the site show that this is one of the oldest residential areas all over Iran."
"The inhabitants of the site were in contact with other communities Time - added the scholar - including Jiroft civilization, which flourished in the third millennium BC and it was also discovered by accident in 2001, following a flood of Halil Roud River, divenedo soon for archaeologists for the richness of the finds, a true 'lost paradise'. Among the artifacts found at the new site, many pottery, which seems to show that the city's inhabitants did not use the wheel to model different.
were also identified two cemeteries and skeletons of a man and a woman, either buried in a fetal position. In addition to skeletons, there were several items, including some shells used as containers for cosmetics. The province of Kerman is home to one of the most important archaeological sites in Iran, including the historic city of Bam, the largest brick structure in the world, proclaimed World Heritage Site by UNESCO and almost completely destroyed by an earthquake in 2003.

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years ago the first modern man could have appeared in Israel

It was long believed that modern man had emerged from Africa 200,000 years ago. Now at Tel Aviv University archaeologists have discovered evidence that Homo sapiens wandering in the area now corresponding to the state of Israel 400,000 years ago and would be the first evidence of modern humans throughout the world.
The results have been found in Qesem Cave, a prehistoric site that is close to Rosh Ha'ayin that before had been dug in 2000. Prof. Avi Gopher and Dr. Ran Barkai Department of Archaeology of Tel Aviv, which handles the excavations, and Prof. Israel Hershkowitz of the University Department of Anatomy and Anthropology Sackler School of Medicine, along with an international team of scientists has performed an analysis morphological eight human teeth found in the cave Qesem.
analysis, which included a CT scan and X-rays, indicates that the size and shape of the teeth are very similar to those of modern man. The teeth found in the cave Qesem are very similar to other evidence of human presence in the area corresponding to the modern state of Israel, dated about 100,000 years ago, discovered in the cave of Skhul in Caramel and in the Qafzeh cave in Lower Galilee near in Nazareth. The results of the researchers 'findings' are being published in the Journal of Physical Anthropology.
Reading the past
Qesem Cave is dated in a period between 400,000 and 200,000 years ago, and archaeologists working there believe that the results indicate significant changes in the behavior of ancient man. This period was crucial in the history of mankind under the terms of culture and biology. The teeth that are being studied indicate that these changes are apparently related to the evolutionary changes taking place at that time.
Prof. Dr. Barkai and Gopher have found that the results for the culture of those who lived in the cave Qesem - including the systematic production of blades of flint, the use regular fire, hunting tests, cutting and sharing of animal flesh and use of mineral raw materials to produce flint tools from underground sources - reinforce the hypothesis that this was in fact the conduct innovative and pioneering may correspond with the emergence of modern man.
A discovery unprecedented
According to the researchers, the findings made in the Cave Qesem could have reversed the theory that modern man is born in Africa. In recent years, archaeological evidence and human skeletons found in Spain and China have undermined this position, but the results Qesem the Cave, because of the time recently to which they refer, are an unprecedented discovery.
Qesem continue excavations in the cave and the researchers hope to discover additional artifacts that will allow them to confirm the results published so far, to improve our understanding of the evolution of the human race - in particular the emergence of modern man .

on GaiaNews

Sunday, January 2, 2011

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New Year. After S. Mass street in the snow!






January 2, 2011

ADS ON Leader and skiing on snow in the hills of Magura.

E 'was an unforgettable afternoon, which had a great time. Those who knew the art of a little slip on the snow, they had the willingness to help those less experienced. Between falls and abundant spins have sipped glasses of hot tea.
With the Oratory Don Bosco group of Bacau were also the youth of the Parish of Margineni, who were led by Don Paul.
skis and sleds, with two old bob, were replaced by plastic bags.
But the absence of sophisticated systems for sliding on snow, did not take off, it even increased the joy and the thrill of "skiing" ...