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Page "Book of Genesis" ¶ 32
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By and calling
By the 1890s, the portion from 23rd Street to 34th Street was so brightly illuminated by electrical advertising signs, that people began calling it " The Great White Way.
In July of the same year, in Seoul, South Korea, the Member Churches of the World Methodist Council ( WMC ) voted to approve and sign a " Methodist Statement of Association " with the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification ( JDDJ ), the agreement which was reached and officially accepted in 1999 by the Catholic Church and the Lutheran World Federation and which proclaimed that " Together we confess: By grace alone, in faith in Christ ’ s saving work and not because of any merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to good works ... as sinners our new life is solely due to the forgiving and renewing mercy that God imparts as a gift and we receive in faith, and never can merit in any way ," affirming " fundamental doctrinal agreement " concerning justification between the Catholic Church, the LWF, and the World Methodist Council.
By 1841 the settlers, particularly those in the New Zealand Company settlement of Wellington, were calling for local militia to be formed.
By the late 1800s, Franz Reuleaux identified hundreds of machine elements ( calling them " simple machines ").
By calling on the dramatic tactic of violent protest that was being used by other oppressed groups, the events at the Stonewall implied that homosexuals had as much reason to be disaffected as they.
By 1910, 31 state legislatures had passed motions calling for reform.
By 1910, 31 state legislatures had passed resolutions calling for a constitutional amendment allowing direct election, and in the same year ten Republican senators who were opposed to reform were forced out of their seats, acting as a " wake-up call to the Senate ".
By 1792-94 newspapers started calling Hamilton supporters " Federalists " and their opponents " Democrats ", " Republicans ", " Jeffersonians " ( people who supported Thomas Jefferson, the 3rd president ), or " Democratic-Republicans ".
By the spring of 1969, Biafra had assembled five MFI-9Bs in Gabon, calling them " Biafra Babies ".
By contrast, Edward did not issue his writs of service, calling upon 21, 540 men, until 27 May 1314.
By convention, a contemporary mixture of pigments that replaces a historical pigment is indicated by calling the resulting color a hue, but manufacturers are not always careful in maintaining this distinction.
By calling certain people " diseased ", psychiatry attempts to deny them responsibility as moral agents, in order to better control them.
By 17 April 1948 the situation in Palestine had deteriorated further and the Security Council adopted Resolution 46 ( 1948 ), calling upon all persons and organizations in Palestine to immediately cease all military activities, as well as acts of violence, terrorism and sabotage ; to refrain from any actions endangering the safety of the Holy Places in Palestine and refrain from importing or acquiring or assisting or encouraging the importation or acquisition of weapons and war materials ( arms embargo ).
By mid-1953, Goldenson had begun a two-front campaign, calling on his old pals at the Hollywood studios ( he had been head of the mighty Paramount theater chain since 1938 ) to convince them to move into television programming ( within a few years shifting television programming from predominantly live shows from New York to films made for television in Hollywood ).
By calling into question the legitimacy of Tel Aviv, they are supporting a one-state solution, which means the destruction of the State of Israel.
By 1986, the band dropped the " Youth " from its name and began calling itself simply The Choir.
By the late 17th century, the Osage were calling themselves Wah-Zha-Zhe.
By December of 1854 this area that Dyer had been calling Pomfret was renamed Rushford after a vote during a Christmas dinner served at Dyer's home.
By the early 1960s, openly gay political organizations such as the Mattachine Society were formally protesting abusive treatment toward gay people, challenging the entrenched idea that homosexuality was an aberrant condition, and calling for the decriminalization of homosexuality.
By contrast, HLL programs typically always invoke a ' standard ' procedure call ( the calling convention ), which involves saving the program state by default and usually allocating additional memory on the stack to save all registers and other relevant state data ( the prologue and epilogue code ).
By 1912, he effectively pressed for the establishment of a Harz National Park, without calling it such, in Der Harzer Heimatspark ( Verlag E. Appelhans u. Co., Braunschweig 1912 ), a brochure that has remained relatively unknown.
By far the most common two are known as " calling up " and " calling down "; each has its merits and inconveniences, but generally any given tower will consistently use one system in preference to the other.
By the late 1960s, the network had begun unofficially calling itself " the National Nine Network ," and became simply the Nine Network in the early 1980s.

By and fulfillment
By that time, the Ittihad leaders had made a statement declaring the fulfillment of their goals and urging their members to join the newly-formed Azerbaijan Communist Party.
By continuing to follow the original business plan of customer service and order fulfillment, DVDEmpire. com weathered the price wars and the dotcom collapses in 2000, and emerged with a still-viable company.
The business operations of Dodd, Mead and Company were suspended in March 1989 pending the outcome of arbitration with its fulfillment house, Metro Services, Inc. By the end of 1990 the company ceased publications.

By and partial
To establish that a function is computable by Turing machine, it is usually considered sufficient to give an informal English description of how the function can be effectively computed, and then conclude " By the Church – Turing thesis " that the function is Turing computable ( equivalently partial recursive ).
By Raoult's law, some of the target compound will vaporize ( in accordance with its partial pressure ).
* By their response to a magnetic field: they can be Type I, meaning they have a single critical field, above which all superconductivity is lost ; or they can be Type II, meaning they have two critical fields, between which they allow partial penetration of the magnetic field.
By the beginning of the 21st century, enough fragments had been recovered ( including the base ) that a partial reconstruction of Agoracritus ' Nemesis was performed in Rhamnus.
By the late 9th century, Danish invasions prompted at least a partial reoccupation of London by the Saxons ; the bridge may have been rebuilt around 990 under the Saxon king Æthelred the Unready, to hasten Saxon troop movements against Sweyn Forkbeard, father of Cnut.
By now, Munson and Tower's plan was well out of the bag, and anyone who had even a partial claim to any of the lands began to litigate.
By 1860 he was able to demonstrate a working device, and obtained a British patent covering a partial vacuum, carbon filament incandescent lamp.
By the definition, we can reduce the partial order to a monadic property: a ≤ b if and only if 0 ≤-a + b.
By some accounts West's mother was of partial Jewish descent.
By this point, benefit of clergy had been transformed from a privilege of ecclesiastical jurisdiction to a mechanism by which first-time offenders could obtain partial clemency for some crimes.
In particular, if v = e < sub > j </ sub > is the jth coordinate vector then ∂< sub > v </ sub > f is the partial derivative of f with respect to the jth coordinate function, i. e., ∂ f / ∂ x < sup > j </ sup >, where x < sup > 1 </ sup >, x < sup > 2 </ sup >, ... x < sup > n </ sup > are the coordinate functions on U. By their very definition, partial derivatives depend upon the choice of coordinates: if new coordinates y < sup > 1 </ sup >, y < sup > 2 </ sup >, ... y < sup > n </ sup > are introduced, then
By the structure of quantum operations, this description is mathematically equivalent to that offered by relative state interpretation where the original system is regarded as a subsystem of a larger system and the state of the original system is given by the partial trace of the state of the larger system.
By resolving the identity in front of V, this can be reduced to a set of partial differential equations for the amplitudes:
By 1897, it became more common to perform complete rather than partial removal of the tonsil after American physician Ballenger noted that partial removal failed to completely alleviate symptoms in a majority of cases.
Initially e is assumed to be a rational number of the form a / b. We then analyze a blown-up difference x of the series representing e and its strictly smaller partial sum, which approximates the limiting value e. By choosing the magnifying factor to be the factorial of b, the fraction a / b and the partial sum are turned into integers, hence x must be a positive integer.
By 1953, the company had moved away from manufacturing buses on truck chassis, to a partial monocoque design with a steel tube skeleton, providing the structural support, enhanced by welded side panels.
By October 6, 170 practice sessions of all or partial phases of the mission were performed on the mockup by the Special Forces troopers, many with live fire.
By 1944 – 1945, in partial concert with the USAAF, they had largely achieved this aim ; but no revolution toppled the Third Reich.
By 2002 and 2003 cross-party resolutions of the Bundestag reached a compromise to support at least a partial rebuilding of the Stadtschloss, but no definite decision was made.
By allowing the partial time derivative of the density to be non-zero, we are not restricting ourselves to incompressible fluids because the density is allowed to change as observed from a fixed position as fluid flows through the control volume.
By imposing additional conditions ( in form of suitable identities ) on these operations, one can then indeed derive the underlying partial order exclusively from such algebraic structures.

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