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institution and had
On August 21, 2009 it was announced that the institution had changed its name to Crandall University in honour of Rev.
The so-called manual acts, whereby the priest took the bread and the cup during the prayer of consecration, which had been deleted in 1552, were restored ; and an " Amen " was inserted after the words of institution and before the Communion, hence separating the elements of Consecration and Communion that Cranmer had tried to knit together.
Harvard University had always been important in the city ( both as a landowner and as an institution ), but it began to play a more dominant role in the city's life and culture.
He also established ceremonies, which he stated the Lord had revealed to him, to allow righteous people to become gods ( joint heirs with Christ ) in the afterlife, and a secular institution to govern the Millennial kingdom.
It was during this same period that al-Azhar University reached the predominance among Islamic schools that it continues to hold today ; pilgrims on their way to hajj often attested to the superiority of the institution, which had become associated with Egypt's body of Islamic scholars.
Whereas 20, 000 freshmen had matriculated in one CUNY institution or another in 1969, more than 35, 000 showed up for registration in the fall of 1970.
Graduating high school students with Ivy League caliber academic records have given the Honors College a closer look as a result, and this has had a trickle-down effect in improving the image of CUNY as a whole, which prior to the inception of the HC had been criticized as ' an institution adrift ' by the Giuliani administration.
Although the fund provided Wheelock ample financial support for the Charity School, Wheelock had trouble recruiting Indians to the institution, primarily because its location was far from tribal territories.
At mid-century Dewey believed that progressive education had “ not really penetrated and permeated the foundations of the educational institution .”( Kohn, Schools, 6, 7 ) As the influence of progressive pedagogy grew broader and more diffuse, practitioners began to vary their application of progressive principles.
Mather represented a small institution of learning that had been founded as the Collegiate School of Connecticut in 1701, and it needed money for a new building in New Haven, Connecticut.
The IRI was made a permanent institution in Fascist Italy in 1937, pursued Fascist policies to create national autarky, and had the power to take over private firms to maximize war production.
Located in a mental institution for women, financial backers considered the subject had no potential and the project was abandoned.
Because he had earned a master's in a scientific field from a " white " institution, some faculty perceived him as arrogant when a young man.
Zucker had previously been the head of the Polymer Group, which acquired another Canadian institution, the Dominion Textile Company.
Among the groups found along northern coast and in neighboring Nicaragua were the Miskito, who although organized in democratic and egalitarian way, had an institution of king, and hence were known as the Mosquito Kingdom.
His attack on the claim that tithing was a divine institution, however, had the greatest theological and social impact.
However, Heinrich had to transfer to the Realschule ( vocational school ) after his father was accused of embezzling church funds and had to leave that institution in 1836 when his father was no longer able to pay for it.
In the United States, all the northern states had abolished the institution of slavery between 1777 and 1804, although southern states clung tightly to the " peculiar institution ".
However, about once a week some character spots the fact that HAL is one letter ahead of IBM, and promptly assumes that Stanley and I were taking a crack at the estimable institution ... As it happened, IBM had given us a good deal of help, so we were quite embarrassed by this, and would have changed the name had we spotted the coincidence.
Continuous persecution in the 1930s resulted in its near-extinction as a public institution: by 1939, active parishes numbered in the low hundreds ( down from 54, 000 in 1917 ), many churches had been leveled, and tens of thousands of priests, monks and nuns were persecuted and killed.

institution and its
Thus, the Church was born and because of its intrinsic character was soon identified as a conservative institution, determined to resist the forces of change, to identify itself with the political rulers, and to maintain a kind of splendid isolation from the masses.
No one could be more devoted than he to the American Congress as an institution and more aware of its historical significance in the political history of the world, and I shall never forget his moving talks, delivered in simple yet eloquent words, upon the meaning of our jobs as Representatives in the operation of representative government and their importance in the context of today's assault upon popular government.
When the Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Company reached its 125th year as a going industrial concern during 1958, it became an almost unique institution in the mechanical world.
Because scientific instruction and research involve increasingly large sums of money, an institution should choose its fields of prominence.
`` Emory could not continue to operate according to its present standards as an institution of higher learning, of true university grade, and meet its financial obligations, without the tax-exemption privileges which are available to it only so long as it conforms to the aforementioned constitutional and statutory provisions '', the statement said.
`` As a private institution, supported by generous individuals, Emory University will recognize no obligation and will adopt no policy that would conflict with its purpose to promote excellence in scholarship and Christian education.
`` When and if it can do so without jeopardizing constitutional and statutory tax-exemption privileges essential to the maintenance of its educational program and facilities, Emory University will consider applications of persons desiring to study or work at the University without regard to race, color or creed, continuing university policy that all applications shall be considered on the basis of intellectual and moral standards and other criteria designed to assure the orderly and effective conduct of the university and the fulfillment of its mission as an institution of Christian higher education ''.
* Every collecting institution must develop an emergency plan to protect its collections and train staff to carry it out.
* Every institution must assign responsibility for caring for collections to members of its staff.
The museum was the first institution of its kind in Greece, but the collection was transferred to Athens in 1834.
Whatever may be the date of the institution of the office of abbreviator, it is certain that it became of greater importance and more highly privileged upon its erection into a college of prelates.
Regulatory arbitrage is where a regulated institution takes advantage of the difference between its real ( or economic ) risk and the regulatory position.
The institution moved into its initial 25 buildings during the 1947-48 school year.
A building society is a financial institution owned by its members as a mutual organization.
In a non-stock corporation with no general voting membership, e. g., a typical university, the board is the supreme governing body of the institution ; its members are sometimes chosen by the board itself.
This institution, with its able investigators and excellent research laboratories, could be of great service in any broad scheme of cooperation.
This institution, with its name, was later emulated by other powers and is reflected in the modern usage of the word ( see Consul ( representative )).
Yes: “ The general duties of every corporation may be collected from the nature and design of its institution: it should act agreeably to its nature, and fulfill the purposes for which it was formed .” Who sees that corporations are living up to those duties?
It was refounded in 1994 by the Thuringian state parliament and has regained its status as a leading German academic and research institution.
The spirit of the institution was semi-monastic and, while the education given was excellent in its way, it is doubtful whether there was enough social life and contact with the world for a pupil of Fichte's temperament and antecedents.

institution and origin
The office has its origin in the 18th-century colonial governors of New South Wales upon its settlement in 1788, and thus is the oldest continuous institution in Australia.
Rabbinic literature traditionally maintains that the institution of employing parchment made of animal hides for the writing of ritual objects such as the Torah, mezuzah, and tefillin is Sinaitic in origin, with special designations for different types of parchment such as gevil and klaf.
A longstanding Jewish position is that unbroken seventh-day shabbat originated among the Jewish people, as their first and most sacred institution, whether this Mosaic tradition preserves an origin in special creation, or whether it indicates some obscure later naturalistic origin.
The Washington Ethical Society functions much like a church, but regards itself as a non-theistic religious institution, honoring the importance of ethical living without mandating a belief in a supernatural origin for ethics.
Scholars have argued that the secondary purpose of the narrative about Onan and Tamar, of which the description of Onan is a part, was to either assert the institution of levirate marriage, or present an aetiological myth for its origin ; Onan's role in the narrative is, thus, as the brother abusing his obligations by agreeing to sexual intercourse with his dead brother's wife, but refusing to allow her to become pregnant as a result.
The university is generally regarded as an institution that has its origin in the Medieval Christian setting.
, ) is the Arabic word ( of Semitic origin ; viz Hebrew midrash ) for any type of educational institution, whether secular or religious ( of any religion ).
Moreover, ING Bank ’ s Trade and Commodity Finance business at its Wholesale Banking branch in the Netherlands routed payments made on behalf of U. S .- sanctioned Cuban clients through other corporate clients to obscure the sanctioned clients ’ identities and its Romanian branch omitted details from a letter of credit involving a U. S. financial institution in order to finance the exportation of U. S .- origin goods to Iran.
Broderick, George ( 2003 ): ' Tynwald-a Manx cult-site and institution of pre-Scandinavian origin ?'.
* Broderick, George ( 2003 ): " Tynwald: A Manx cult-site and institution of pre-Scandinavian origin ".
Rhodes College traces its origin as a degree-granting institution to the Masonic University of Tennessee, founded in 1848 in Clarksville, Tennessee, by the Grand Masonic Lodge of Tennessee.
Transfer origin characterizes the percentage of students who transfer to the institution, and only applies to four year or higher institutions.
This date is recognised as the origin of the institution.
Scholars have argued that the Tamar narrative, of which the description of Shelah is a part, secondarily aims to either assert the institution of levirate marriage, or present an aetiological myth for its origin ; Shelah's role in the narrative would thus be as the example of a brother refusing to perform levirate marriage.
Scholars have argued that the Tamar narrative, of which the description of Er is a part, secondarily aims to either assert the institution of levirate marriage, or present an aetiological myth for its origin ; Er's role in the narrative would thus be as the background to the main plot, his death being the reason for levirite marriage to become an issue.
According to some it is anterior to Charlemagne ( 742-814 ), according to others it had its origin at the end of the 12th century, but it certainly antedates the year 1050, since Pope Leo IX ( 1051 ) speaks of the rose as of an ancient institution at his time.
The origin of the institution of qadi is the old Arab arbitrator, the Hakam, but qualities from officials in areas conquered by Arabs have been added to the structure.
This was the origin of the Ombudsman institution.
The institution traces its origin to 1835 when Scandinavian immigrants established the Hillsboro Academy in Hillsboro, Illinois, with the name changing to “ The Literary and Theological Institute of the Lutheran Church of the Far West " in 1846.
Their humble origins, and the fact that they owed their education and advancement solely to the Emperor, allowed Emperor Haile Selassie to trust them implicitly and to favor them and other commoners of humble origin in government appointments and high positions at the expense of the aristocracy, whose loyalty to his person, rather than to the institution of Emperor he suspected.
" Feeling the necessity for fundamental reforms in legal procedure, he published, in 1849, his Trial by Jury, in which, after pointing out that the origin of that institution was common to both Germany and England, and showing in a masterly way the benefits which had accrued to the latter country through its more extended application, he pleaded for its freer admission in the tribunals of his own country.
It was the first institution in the Polish lands offering scholarship premiums for the talented but poor young people of Polish origin in the Polish areas under Prussian / German domination ( Greater Poland, Pomerania, Silesia but especially in the Grand Duchy of Poznań ).

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