Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Book of Common Prayer" ¶ 64
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

ECP and has
The ECP also has a Ph. D. programme for students with a master's level.
It typically has about 980 cadets, 95 percent of whom go on to four-year universities, The school's Army ROTC program commissions approximately 35 cadets per year as US Army 2nd Lieutenants through the US Army two-year Early Commissioning Program ( ECP ), and about 100 cadets each year go to one of the five major United States Service academies.

ECP and its
In its most basic form, an FOB consists of a ring of barbed wire around a position with a fortified entry control point, or ECP.
*** 8890-8899 are fully equipped with ECP braking technology, which CP is currently testing on its coal fleet.
In 1984, the California Guard received 95 percent ( 74 of 78 ) of its ROTC lieutenants from the ECP program.

ECP and upon
ECP Lieutenants are obligated to serve for a total of eight years upon commissioning: the initial two years are served in the Reserve Components ( Army Reserve or Army National Guard ), and the additional six years are served in either the Reserve Components or the Active Component, dependent upon the needs of the Army.

ECP and on
Eight Bucks Experiment, the band portraying fictional English band ECP, were featured on a European release of the soundtrack.
The 12km Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway ( KPE ), stretching from the East Coast Parkway ( ECP ) to Tampines Expressway ( TPE ), opened to traffic on 20 September 2008.
* Extended Capability Port ( ECP ) is a half-duplex bi-directional interface similar to EPP, except that PC implementations use direct memory access ( usually ISA DMA on channel 3 ) to provide even faster data transfer than EPP by having the ISA DMA hardware and the parallel port interface hardware handle the work of transferring the data instead of letting the CPU do this work.
An ECP interface on a PC can improve transfers to pre-IEEE-1284 printers as well, by reducing the CPU load during the transfer ; however, the transfer in that case is unidirectional.
Built almost entirely on reclaimed land, construction of the ECP commenced in the early 1970s.
Basic ECP eligibility and entrance requirements include a minimum cumulative high school GPA of 2. 0 on a 4. 0 scale ( 2. 5 for scholarship ); a minimum SAT score of 850 ( Math and Verbal sections only ) or ACT score of 17 ( 920 / 19 for scholarship ); pass a Department of Defense Medical Examination ( arranged by Army ROTC ); pass the Army height / weight and physical fitness standards ; have U. S. citizenship ( original naturalization document issued by INS or state issued birth certificate ); and be between 17 and 27 years of age and of good moral character.

ECP and 1
The fifteen minutes taken to read a nearly-full 16MB card-directly to hard disk-via Flashpath using the slowest ( 128kbit / s ) PC floppy controller was still simpler and slightly faster than the quickest reliable ( 115. 2kbit / s ) serial link, without the need for connection, synching and thumbnail previewing, and only beaten by expensive parallel-port based external card readers that could do the same job in two minutes or less ( 1000kbit / s-plus, comparable to USB 1. 0 ) when connected to a compatible high-speed ECP or EPP port ( and ~ 5 minutes using a basic PPT in failsafe mode ).

ECP and .
Ulipristal acetate ( known as ella in the US and Ellaone in Europe ) was approved as an ECP in Europe in early 2009 and in the US in August 2010.
Different ECP regimens have different effectiveness levels, and even for a single regimen different studies may find varying rates of effectiveness.
It can provide connection authentication, transmission encryption ( using ECP, RFC 1968 ), and compression.
A euronote may take the form of euro-commercial paper ( ECP ) or euro-certificates of deposit.
After the war the Communist Party of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic ( ECP ) became the pre-eminent organization in the republic.
The ethnic Estonian share in the total ECP membership decreased from 90 % in 1941 to 48 % in 1952.
On the eve of perestroika the ECP claimed about 100, 000 members ; less than half were ethnic Estonians and they totalled less than 7 % of the country's population.
The ECP remained stable in the early perestroika years but waned in the late 1980s.
In particular, the O157: H7 serotype is negative for invasiveness ( Sereny test ), adheres through the E. coli common pilus ( ECP ), and does not produce heat stable or heat labile toxins.
The only pieces of legacy hardware that use ISA DMA and are still fairly common are the built-in Floppy disk controllers of many PC mainboards and those IEEE 1284 parallel ports that support the fast ECP mode.
According to the magazine L ' Etudiant, the ECP is ranked 2nd in the top-list of French engineering schools, ahead of more than 200.
The ECP recruits among the top 4 % of the students in classes préparatoires, who represent themselves 4 % of higher education students, which makes it a selective and prestigious institution.
Education at the ECP is multidisciplinary and typically lasts three to four years.
In electrochemistry, the electrochemical potential,, sometimes abbreviated to ECP, is a thermodynamic measure that combines the concepts of energy stored in the form of chemical potential and electrostatics.
* The ECP concert was shot at the SLC Indian Center.
With the recent advent of electronically controlled pneumatic brakes ( ECP )— either hard-wired or radio-controlled — and integrated electronics for locomotive control and engineer's cab display systems, DP can now be provided via the ECP brake communication media, and other manufacturers are able to provide this capability.
It opposes emergency contraception, including after cases of rape, asserting that the ECP is actually an abortifacient.
** the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures also called the École centrale Paris ( ECP, or simply Centrale Paris ) was founded in 1829.

has and since
The situation of the South since 1865 has been unique in the western world.
For lawyers, reflecting perhaps their parochial preferences, there has been a special fascination since then in the role played by the Supreme Court in that transformation -- the manner in which its decisions altered in `` the switch in time that saved nine '', President Roosevelt's ill-starred but in effect victorious `` Court-packing plan '', the imprimatur of judicial approval that was finally placed upon social legislation.
He returned to Germany for the first time in 1953, where he has since conducted in Cologne, Frankfurt, and Berlin.
according to many critics, in fact, the South has led the North in literature since the Civil War, both quantitatively and qualitatively.
An example of the changes which have crept over the Southern region may be seen in the Southern Negro's quest for a position in the white-dominated society, a problem that has been reflected in regional fiction especially since 1865.
There was also a lesson, one that has served ever since to keep Americans, in their conflicts with one another, from turning from the ballot to the bullet.
We have staved off a war and, since our behavior has involved all these elements, we can only keep adding to our ritual without daring to abandon any part of it, since we have not the slightest notion which parts are effective.
It had a bucolic atmosphere that it has lost long since.
Also, since the man questioned feels a strong compulsion to answer ( and thereby avoid the consequences of being thought queer ) the question has assumed some measurable properties of a command.
The novelist who has been badly baptized in psychoanalysis often gives us the impression that since all men must have an Oedipus complex all men must have the same faces.
`` We were possessed by visions of a new civilization to come, very pure and elevated '', he has said, `` in fact some ideal form of socialism such as we had dreamed of since the war of 1914-1918 ''.
The young William Faulkner in New Orleans in the 1920's impressed the novelist Hamilton Basso as obviously conscious of being a Southerner, and there is no evidence that since then he has ever considered himself any less so.
The planter aristocracy has appeared in literature at least since John Pendleton Kennedy published Swallow-Barn in 1832 and in his genial portrait of Frank Meriwether presiding over his plantation dominion initiated the most persistent tradition of Southern literature.
The book, published in 1927, has been selling steadily ever since.
Some of the children of the family could not pronounce this name and called her Paula, a soubriquet Carl liked so much she has been Paula ever since.
This rather detached attitude toward life's encumbrances has seemed to be the dominant trait in Mercer's personality ever since.
It has been a long time since he has seen any campaign money, and when the proposition is laid down to him as the friends of Mr. Hearst are laying it down these days he is quite likely to get aboard the Hearst bandwagon ''.
At about the age of twelve I became a Spencerian liberal, and I have always considered myself a liberal of some kind even though the definition has changed repeatedly since Spencer became a reactionary.
But since 1945, Sam Spade has undergone a metamorphosis ; ;
But since last fall the United States has been moving toward a pro-neutralist position and now is ready to back the British plan for a cease-fire patrolled by outside observers and followed by a conference of interested powers.
Less than half the sum has been spent, since the Interama board pinched pennies during that period of painstaking negotiations.
Chancellor Adenauer's Christian Democratic Party slipped only a little in the voting but it was enough to lose the absolute Bundestag majority it has enjoyed since 1957.
The crisis has been renewed since then but the confusion has hardly been compounded.

0.303 seconds.