The Ancient Knights of Canada??

The Canadian Press

Ancient Knights of Malta gets its first nonaristocratic head

Story by The Canadian Press • 2023-05-03

John Dunlap.jpg

ROME (AP) — A Canadian lawyer who found his vocation caring for AIDS patients in Harlem has been elected the grand master of the Knights of Malta, the first non-European and first nonaristocratic head of the ancient lay Catholic order that provides humanitarian aid around the world.

John Dunlap, 66, was elected by an absolute majority of 99 voting members of a Knights body known as “the council complete of state.” He immediately informed Pope Francis of his election and was being sworn in later Wednesday at the Knights’ magnificent villa on Rome’s Aventine hill.

The election brings a hoped-for end to a tumultuous few years during which Francis intervened to remove a previous grand master during a governance crisis. Francis then imposed a new set of constitutional reforms on the order in ways that critics said threatened its sovereignty.

The Knights of Malta is an ancient chivalric order that runs hospitals and clinics around the world. It counts 13,500 knights, dames and chaplains, 80,000 permanent volunteers and 42,000 employees, most of them medical personnel who lend first aid in areas of natural disasters and conflict zones.

As a sovereign body under international law, the Knights have diplomatic relations with more than 100 countries, which facilitates the delivery of humanitarian aid in war zones and conflict areas, and participate in the U.N. and other international organizations as an observer state.

Nicole Winfield, The Associated Press

A Newer Take on Evolutionary Biology

It appears that sexuality isn’t as  cast in concrete as we were led to believe in biology class.

This article explains how, it comes to be,  in some fish, that when the master of a harem dies, one of the females can and will change sex into the male of the species and then take over the duties of the master of the harem. Fascinating!!

normal_thumb Click here for more …

The People You Meet On The High Seas: Dick Jeppson

DickJeppson

Dick was indeed the last person I thought I’d meet.

Worked with the Nobel Prize winning physicist Luis Alvarez. Engaged in some research on gems stones early in his career, he noticed that they sparkled when subjected to high energy radiation. The rubies were, of course, lasing and Dick just missed being the discoverer of lasers. Alvarez used to kid him about it all the time…… but that is not why you know him. Dick was aboard the B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay on August 6, 1945, and somewhere over the Pacific went back to arm the detonation device on ‘Little Boy’. Recalling the famous mission, he said that, from the perspective of the cockpit,  it was a non-event: ‘Just another milk run’. Later, Dick went on the to run a company that produced linear accelerators for medical purposes.