By Bill Heaney

The Archdiocese of Glasgow announced that he died peacefully on Tuesday evening at the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow.
He had been a priest for 64 years and a bishop for 45 years.
He trained at St Mary’s College, Blairs, Aberdeenshire, before studying at the Scots College and Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome where he obtained degrees in philosophy and theology and was ordained a priest in Rome on October 26, 1958.
After a series of roles, including his only Parish Priest appointment to Wick and Thurso, he was named bishop of Aberdeen in February 1977.
He was one of the last surviving bishops in the world to have been appointed by Pope (now saint) Paul VI.
Cardinal Thomas J Winning, whose successor Archbishop Conti was; Archbishop William Nolan, the current Archbishop of Glasgow and the late and Archbishop Philip Tartaglia, who succeeded Archbishop Conti.
After 25 years in Aberdeen as Bishop, he was named as successor to Cardinal Tom Winning as Archbishop of Glasgow in 2002, and served in that role for 10 years.
He added: “He was a much-loved figure, a man of great energy and pastoral zeal, who loved the Church and loved the people in his care.
“When I was appointed Archbishop earlier this year I found him both gracious and welcoming and full of ideas and suggestions for the future.”
During his time as Archbishop of Glasgow, Archbishop Mario Conti oversaw the renovation of St Andrew’s Cathedral and the construction of the adjacent Italian Cloister Garden to remember the victims of the wartime Arandora Star tragedy.
One of his proudest moments came when he welcomed Pope Benedict XVI to Britain at the first public Mass of the German Pope’s state visit in 2010 at Bellahouston Park in Glasgow.
He held honorary doctorates from the Universities of Aberdeen, Glasgow and Glasgow Caledonian.
He was also a member of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and a former lead chaplain to the Knights of Malta and the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre.
Top picture: Archbishop Conti pictured concelebrating Mass with his friend Monsignor Charles Burns and the late Father Dominic Doogan in St Mahew’s Church, Cardross. Picture by Bill Heaney