The B.C. Catholic
The B.C. Catholic is a weekly newspaper serving the needs of the Catholic community in British Columbia and is the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver.[1] It was founded in 1931 and is published approximately forty-eight times a year from the archdiocese's main offices in Vancouver. The B.C. Catholic is a member of Canadian Catholic News and the Catholic Press Association of the United States and Canada.
![]() | |
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Archdiocese of Vancouver |
Publisher | Archbishop of Vancouver |
Editor | Paul Schratz |
Founded | 1929, as the Bulletin |
Headquarters | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Website | bccatholic.ca |
History
The B.C. Catholic was established in 1931 by Archbishop Mark Duke and has been the official newspaper for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver (RCAV) ever since. The newspaper began as the Bulletin in 1924 through to 1931, when it became The B.C. Catholic.
Editors
- Father D.J Carey August 15, 1931 - June 30, 1934
- Father Thomas B. Freeney July 7, 1934 – January 19, 1935
- Father Aidan Angle November 9, 1935 – April 10, 1937
- A. F. Carlyle May 29, 1937 – April 2, 1938
Columnists
- Peter Vogel
- Msgr. Pedro Lopez-Gallo
- Colleen Roy
- C.S. Morrissey
Reporters
- Agnieszka Krawczynski[2]
gollark: <@404675960663703552> Random kind of late interjection: Ryzen can do (not the registered kind) ECC memory, though probably not on all boards. There's an ASRock one with IPMI and stuff which supports it.
gollark: Just buy 5 MacBooks, then, obviously.
gollark: I don't think they are great NAS choices.
gollark: Laptops only have one small internal drive bay generally and you need to connect the rest over slow USB thingies.
gollark: Anyone use netdata (https://github.com/netdata/netdata) for monitoring? It seems to be pretty nice for setting up simple dashboards for things without huge amounts of fiddling.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.