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Page "The Ashes" ¶ 82
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compromise and form
A bitter, and very public, dispute ensued between those, like Edmund Grindal and Richard Cox, who wished to preserve in exile the exact form of worship of the 1552 Prayer Book ; and those, like John Knox the pastor of the congregation, who regarded that book as still partially tainted with compromise.
In May 2000, a compromise candidate was found in the form of Andris Bērziņš, the Latvian Way mayor of Rīga.
He appears to have belonged to the group which attempted to form a compromise position between monophysitism and the orthodox teaching.
Officials with ties to the Shanghai administration form a powerful faction in the national government, the so-called Shanghai Clique, which often competes against the rival Youth League Faction over personnel appointments and policy decisions: Xi Jinping, the presumptive successor to Hu Jintao as General Secretary and President, is a compromise candidate between the two groups with supporters in both camps.
A meeting between Bèze and the Cardinal of Lorraine, of the House of Guise, seemed promising ; both appeared ready to compromise on the form of worship.
During the constitutional referendum on creating a republic in 1999 Duffy in Australian media interviews was critical of the form of presidency being proposed, arguing in particular that the lack of security of tenure offered to the proposed office holder would seriously compromise the office holder's independence and ability to exercise their powers.
For a number of Mexican autonomists, a constitutionally-sanctioned monarchy seemed a logical solution to the problem of creating a new state as it seemed to be a compromise between those who pushed for a representative form of government and those who wished to keep Mexico's monarchist traditions.
Consequently, Russian diplomacy began pressuring the two countries to reach a compromise and form an alliance.
Because of the need to expand their synagogue, the Orthodox Jewish congregation merged with a smaller Reform group to form a compromise Conservative congregation in 1939, and Jewish community life in Clarksburg centered around this synagogue.
Law's official response took the form of an open letter published on 13 January 1913, in which Law offered a compromise that food duties would not be placed before Parliament to vote on until after a second, approving election took place.
" puristic "), is a conservative form of the Modern Greek language conceived in the early 19th century as a compromise between Ancient Greek and Dimotiki of the time.
While over 40 outed ministers agreed to the new terms, submitting themselves to the Crown's High Church Anglican form of church governance, accepting episcopacy and the King as head of the church, Cameron remained with those who rejected any accommodation that would compromise their presbyterian principles.
John Quincy Adams, now in the House of Representatives, used his Committee of Manufacturers to produce a compromise bill that, in its final form, reduced revenues by five million dollars, lowered duties on non-competitive products, and retained high tariffs on woolens, iron, and cotton products.
At the London Conference of 1960, it was obvious that Buganda autonomy and a strong unitary government were incompatible, but no compromise emerged, and the decision on the form of government was postponed.
This form of state is seen as a compromise by the ruling class, sacrificing a portion of profits to pacify the workers and prevent proletarian revolutions.
The controversy over supranational planning led to a compromise in the form of the 1971 Comprehensive Program for the Further Extension and Improvement of Cooperation and the Further Development of Socialist Economic Integration, which laid the guidelines for Comecon activity through 1990.
They all urge or compromise with, in some shape or form, parlamentarianism ".
‣ Evidence of hemodynamic compromise in the form of elevated end diastolic left ventricular or left atrial pressure or moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension
Eventually a compromise form of a voucher privatization similar to used in Czech Republic was proposed and adopted on 11 June 1991 by the Supreme Soviet of Russia.
Semipelagianism in its original form was developed as a compromise between Pelagianism and the teaching of Church Fathers such as Saint Augustine, who taught that man cannot come to God without the grace of God.
High rail ( also called " hi-rail " and " hirail ") is a phrase used in model railroading in North America, mostly in O scale and S scale, to describe a " compromise " form of modelling that strives for realism while accepting the compromises in scale associated with toy train equipment.
Penetration test is a form of verification of the weakness and countermeasures adopted by an organization: a White hat hacker tries to attack an organization information technology assets, to find out how is easy or difficult to compromise the IT security.
The reason for employing an autopen is typically emotive, intending to form a compromise between making every signature by hand, and printing a reproduction of the signature, which is perceived as impersonal by the recipient.
; Cheat reps: Cheating is a deliberate compromise of form to maximize reps.

compromise and larger
When the CCITT ( now ITU-T ) was standardizing ATM, parties from the United States wanted a 64-byte payload because this was felt to be a good compromise in larger payloads optimized for data transmission and shorter payloads optimized for real-time applications like voice ; parties from Europe wanted 32-byte payloads because the small size ( and therefore short transmission times ) simplify voice applications with respect to echo cancellation.
In this sense, it definitely is part of the TCB of the larger computer system that comprises the UNIX server, the user's browsers and the Web application ; in other words, breaching into the Web server through e. g. a buffer overflow may not be regarded as a compromise of the operating system proper, but it certainly constitutes a damaging exploit on the Web application.
The maximum allowable separation is a compromise between a larger value to identify as many real matches as possible and a smaller value to minimize the probability of spurious matches.
Throughout the period, however, political problems usually were solved through compromise, and political parties gradually increased their power over the government and held an ever larger role in the political process as a result.
A dinghy is useful to avoid the need for expensive dock or slip space, so owners of small yachts compromise by carrying a small rigid dinghy or deflated inflatable, or by towing a larger dinghy.
For Audi in their Audi S8 5. 2 FSI quattro, the V10 was a compromise between a V12 which would be too long and suffer more internal friction due to extra cylinders and values, and a V8 which would be more compact but have larger heavier pistons and produce lower revs.
This configuration is a compromise between the smaller inline-four engine and the larger straight-6.
The national legislature — or Congress — envisioned by the Convention embodied the key compromise of the Convention between the small states which wanted to retain the power they had under the one state / one vote Congress of the Articles of Confederation and the large states which wanted the weight of their larger populations and wealth to have a proportionate share of power.
In March 1969, the federal and provincial governments reached a compromise to locate at the St. Scholastique site, and proposals were drawn up to expropriate, an area larger than the entire city of Montreal.
Paderborner Pilsener Export has a reputation for being of lower quality but also a compromise between price and amount of alcohol ( since it has a barely larger amount of alcohol ).
For example, while the Three-Fifths Compromise could be seen to favor Southern states ( which generally had larger slave populations ), the Connecticut compromise tended to favor the Northern states ( which were generally smaller ).
To some extent the second version of the APG ( 2003-2009 ) created a compromise, naming larger clades but allowing the sensu stricto.
The Panel did not believe that the multiple provincial and territorial securities regulators are able to work effectively as part of a national systemic risk management team, as structural challenges will likely compromise its ability to be proactive, collaborative, and generally effective in helping to address larger capital market issues on a timely basis.
The vehicle represented a compromise because it did not have a low-range gear selection, nor a locking differential, as found on larger Land Rover models.
The compromise should offer a larger repayment towards the creditor's debt than could otherwise be expected were the Debtor to be made bankrupt.
Following the defeat of the Shops Bill 1986, which would have enabled widespread Sunday trading, compromise legislation was introduced in July 1994 in England and Wales, coming into force on 28 August 1994, allowing shops to open, but restricting opening times of larger stores i. e. those over to a maximum of six hours, between 10am and 6pm only.
Finally a compromise was reached: the City of Los Angeles agreed to swap land with the Archdiocese, giving the Church a much larger plot next to the 101 Freeway.
In 1997, however, the two railroads, CSX Transportation and the Norfolk Southern Railway, struck a compromise agreement to jointly acquire Conrail and split most of its assets between them, with Norfolk Southern acquiring a larger portion of the Conrail network via a larger stock buyout.
The larger the structure, therefore, the more likely it is to fall, due entirely to the higher number of balanced cards that could fail and compromise the integrity of the card building.
They reached a kind of compromise in which Adjara obtained larger autonomous status, Abashidze agreed not to run for the presidency of Georgia, and Shevardnadze allowed Abashidze to maintain power in Adjara.
It was incorporated in 1834, but then annexed by Louisville in 1837 after a compromise in which the canal would be widened to handle larger ships, but a new rail line going from Lexington to the Ohio River would go to Portland's wharf instead of Louisville's.

1.975 seconds.