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beginnings and so-called
This part of New York was in the so-called " Burnt Over District ," which earlier in the 19th century had generated much religious excitement, including the beginnings of Mormonism, and social causes, such as abolitionism and support for the Underground Railroad.
Bereshit ( Genesis ) begins with the so-called " primeval history " ( Genesis 1 – 11 ), the story of the world's beginnings and the descent of Abraham.
No formal charges were filed against anyone at UPA in the beginnings of the so-called " Red Scare ", but the government contracts were lost as Washington severed its ties with Hollywood.
During his long tenure in the midst of the surrounding political chaos of the Greek Dark Ages, Egypt was beset by foreign invaders ( including the so-called Sea Peoples and the Libyans ) and experienced the beginnings of increasing economic difficulties and internal strife which would eventually lead to the collapse of the Twentieth Dynasty.
The beginnings of the so-called " Dang ­­ rek Chieftains " small chiefdoms north and south of the Dangrek Mountains are obscure.

beginnings and reform
The Commonwealth-Saxony personal union however gave rise to the emergence of the reform movement in the Commonwealth, and the beginnings of the Polish Enlightenment culture.
The 1960s brought with them the beginnings of reform efforts in the Communist party, and the subsequent liberalization of literature and increasing prestige of authors.
The Amsterdam Treaty meant a greater emphasis on citizenship and the rights of individuals, an attempt to achieve more democracy in the shape of increased powers for the European Parliament, a new title on employment, a Community area of freedom, security and justice, the beginnings of a common foreign and security policy ( CFSP ) and the reform of the institutions in the run-up to enlargement.
He graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1880, the beginnings of an era of naval reform and greater professionalization.
In its beginnings, it took the form of an Azhar-led religious reform movement that was more concerned with the social conditions of Egyptian society.
Harakat al-Mahrumin ( meaning The Movement of the Deprived or the The Movement of the Dispossessed or The Movement of the Disinherited ) was established by Imam Musa al-Sadr and member of parliament Hussein el-Husseini in 1974, as an attempt to reform the Lebanese system, although the beginnings can be traced to 1969 in declarations by the Imam al-Sadr calling upon peace and equality between all Lebanese confessions and religions, so that no one confession would remain " deprived " in any region in Lebanon, noting that the Shia community in Lebanon remained the poorest and most neglected by the Lebanese government.
The appearance of railways brought new travel opportunities and challenges to closeknit communities, while the 1870s saw the beginnings of land reform that would change Irish rural life, reform initially fought for through mass mobilisation and sometimes violence in the Land War, led by organisations like Michael Davitt's Land League and through the radical political leadership of Charles Stewart Parnell.

beginnings and movement
In the beginnings of the Methodist movement, adherents were instructed to receive the sacraments within the Anglican Church ; however, the Methodists soon petitioned to receive the sacraments from the local preachers who conducted worship services and revivals.
From the very beginnings of the movement, Disciples have founded institutions of higher learning.
The beginnings of meteorology can be traced back to ancient India, as the Upanishads contain serious discussion about the processes of cloud formation and rain and the seasonal cycles caused by the movement of earth around the sun.
From the movement ’ s beginnings, with its roots in Wesleyan theology, Methodism has distinguished itself as a religious movement strongly tied to social issues.
Rock and roll appeared at a time when racial tensions in the United States were entering a new phase, with the beginnings of the civil rights movement for desegregation, leading to the Supreme Court ruling that abolished the policy of " separate but equal " in 1954, but leaving a policy which would be extremely difficult to enforce in parts of the United States.
The movement traces its beginnings to a conference in Paris, France of two thousand people in 1974.
The second major incident arose out of an initially peaceful protest by the Mau ( which literally translates as " strongly held opinion "), a non-violent popular movement which had its beginnings in the early 1900s on Savai ' i, led by Lauaki Namulauulu Mamoe, an orator chief deposed by Solf.
The early beginnings of the national Mau movement began in 1908 with the ' Mau a Pule ' resistance on Savai ' i, led by orator chief Lauaki Namulau ' ulu Mamoe.
There were several different forms of Christology in the beginnings of the Unitarian movement ; ultimately, the variety that became prevalent was that Jesus was a man, but one with a unique relationship to God.
In his Lives of the Sophists, Philostratus traced the beginnings of the movement to the orator Aeschines in the 4th century B. C.
Franz Alexander led in the beginnings of the 20th century, the movement looking for the dynamic interrelation between mind and body.
Although its beginnings were from the Deobandi movement, no particular interpretation of Islam has been endorsed since the beginning of the movement.
Ready-to-eat breakfast cereals have their beginnings in the vegetarian movement in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, which influenced members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the United States.
* The Hip Hop Generation, another popular American cultural movement describing a musical and cultural phenomenon that from humble beginnings had an international impact.
Reflecting its Quaker beginnings, Upper Darby was active in the antislavery movement.
At 265 pages, it is a relatively brief history of the anarchist movement, covering its philosophical beginnings in Europe with William Godwin and Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, the further development by the Russians Peter Kropotkin and Mikhail Bakunin and its influence on the working class movements of the 19th and 20th centuries mainly in Europe and Russia, but also in the United States.
As a god of motion he looks after passages, causes actions to start and presides over all beginnings, and since movement and change are bivalent, he has a double nature, symbolised in his two headed image.
The first three volumes chronicled the beginnings of the women's rights movement, including the years that Stone was active.
His speech and movement are those of a classical actor with a studied technique, but he is unpretentious and not temperamental at all with " inclinations still close to his humble beginnings and Irish farmer forbears ".
His 1833 Principles of Church Reform is associated with the beginnings of the Broad Church movement.
* 3000 BC-The beginnings of meteorology can be traced back in India to 3000 B. C. E, such as the Upanishads, contain serious discussion about the processes of cloud formation and rain and the seasonal cycles caused by the movement of earth round the sun.

beginnings and ",
Galileo wrote " Waves are produced by the vibrations of a sonorous body, which spread through the air, bringing to the tympanum of the ear a stimulus which the mind interprets as sound ", a remarkable statement that points to the beginnings of physiological and psychological acoustics.
* K. B. McFarlane, The origins of religious dissent in England ( New York, Collier Books, 1966 ) ( Originally published under the title " John Wycliffe and the beginnings of English nonconformity ", 1952 ).
The beginnings of the modern army arose during 1916, when the French government established the " Legion of the Orient ", which included Lebanese soldiers.
The beginnings of the Spanish musical were focused on romantic Spanish archetypes: Andalusian villages and landscapes, gypsys, " bandoleros ", and copla and other popular folk songs included in story development.
Yale traces its beginnings to " An Act for Liberty to Erect a Collegiate School ", passed by the General Court of the Colony of Connecticut on October 9, 1701, in an effort to create an institution to train ministers and lay leadership for Connecticut.
Showing Psyche's darker dance side, the " Private Desires " release became an exclusive retrospective of Psyche's early beginnings and included " Brain Collapses " live as well as the ' insider tip ' " Secret Angel ", as well as a previously unreleased " Until the Shadows " from Darrin's brother.
Gaiman uses " The Tempest ", a play fundamentally about change, endings, and new beginnings, to finish the series.
Benefactor Cornelius van der Geest is said to be responsible for the wording, stating: " in his time a smith and afterwards a famous painter ", keeping in accordance with the legends surrounding Matsys ' humble beginnings.
Once the railroad went through, Mackville inhabitants would say, " meet me at the woods ", thus the beginnings of present day Atwood.
" Every once and again there is a pull to return to one's own roots or beginnings, with the perspective of time and experience, to feel the familiar things you once loved and love still ", said McKennitt.
William Porter, the Attorney General, was famously quoted as saying that he "... would rather meet the Hottentot at the hustings, voting for his representative, than meet him in the wilds with his gun upon his shoulder ", and so the beginnings of the multi-racial Cape franchise was born in 1853.
Origen interpreted the New Testament's reference ( Acts 3: 21 ) to a " restoration of all things ", ( Greek: apocatastasis of all things ), as meaning that sinners might be restored to God and released from Hell, returning the universe to a state identical to its pure beginnings.
The album also contains one of the few songs about numbers ( and love ) — " When Numbers Get Serious ", which evokes the beginnings of the Information Age.
According to these accounts, Godric, who began from humble beginnings as the son of Ailward and Edwenna, " both of slender rank and wealth, but abundant in righteousness and virtue ", was a pedlar, then a sailor and entrepreneur, and may have been the captain and owner of the ship that conveyed Baldwin I of Jerusalem to Jaffa in 1102.
GW had its beginnings with a New Testament translation titled " The New Testament in the Language of Today: An American Translation ", published in 1963 by LCMS pastor and seminary professor William F. Beck ( 1904 – 1966 ).
They viewed comedy as simply the " art of reprehension ", and made no reference to light and cheerful events, or troublous beginnings and happy endings, associated with classical Greek comedy.
From its beginnings as " Harbourfront Corporation ", a federal Crown Corporation established in 1972, Harbourfront Centre was formed on January 1, 1991 as a non-profit charitable organization with a mandate to organize and present public events and to operate a site encompassing York Quay and John Quay ( south of Queens Quay West ).
Here they created soundscapes, one of which ended up being the closing song on Forgiveness Rock Record, " Me & My Hand ", and the rest became the beginnings of the album.
There are two " Lesson 39 " s, both entitled " Repeat Yourself the Burkiss Way ", which have identical beginnings.
Such a simplified system usually omits diacritics and tie-bars, simplifies-yj and-ij word endings to "- y ", ignores the Ukrainian soft sign ( ь ) and apostrophe (’), and may substitute ya, ye, yu, yo for ia, ie, iu, io at the beginnings of words.
In their beginnings, when they were not great in size, their brutal history and propensity for violence distinguished them from other Latino gangs in Chicago, making them equal players with the larger Black " Super Gangs ", such as the Gangster Disciples, the Almighty Vice Lord Nation and the Black P. Stones.
After the coach mentions the football positions called " ends ", Morgenstern asks where the beginnings for those ends are, because ends must have beginnings, according to Aristotle.

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