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organ and which
His pamphlet " The Art of Organ Building and Organ Playing in Germany and France " ( 1906, republished with an appendix on the state of the organ-building industry in 1927 ) effectively launched the 20th century Orgelbewegung, which turned away from romantic extremes and rediscovered baroque principles — although this sweeping reform movement in organ building eventually went further than Schweitzer himself had intended.
He envisaged instruments in which the French late-romantic full-organ sound should work integrally with the English and German romantic reed pipes, and with the classical Alsace Silbermann organ resources and baroque flue pipes, all in registers regulated ( by stops ) to access distinct voices in fugue or counterpoint capable of combination without loss of distinctness: different voices singing together in the same music.
# One bishop succeeding another in the same see meant that there was a continuity of teaching: " while the Church as a whole is the vessel into which the truth is poured, the Bishops are an important organ is carrying out this task ".
This pharmaceutical coding system divides drugs into different groups according to the organ or system on which they act and / or their therapeutic and chemical characteristics.
:" The first part of our arithmetic organ ... should be a parallel storage organ which can receive a number and add it to the one already in it, which is also able to clear its contents and which can store what it contains.
In organ pipes of the reed family, brass strips ( called tongues ) are used as the reeds, which beat against the shallot ( or beat " through " the shallot in the case of a " free " reed ).
* Endocrine organ — bone controls phosphate metabolism by releasing fibroblast growth factor – 23 ( FGF-23 ), which acts on kidneys to reduce phosphate reabsorption.
Filling the interior of the bone is the trabecular bone tissue ( an open cell porous network also called cancellous or spongy bone ), which is composed of a network of rod-and plate-like elements that make the overall organ lighter and allow room for blood vessels and marrow.
For example, during the menstrual cycle, the breasts are enlarged by premenstrual water retention ; during pregnancy the breasts become enlarged and denser ( firmer ) because of the prolactin-caused organ hypertrophy, which begins the production of breast milk, increases the size of the nipples, and darkens the skin color of the nipple-areola complex ; these changes continue during the lactation and the breastfeeding periods.
2009, compared an analysis of blood and organ system data from trials with rats fed three main commercialized genetically modified types of maize which are present in food and feed in the world.
As they do not have bone marrow, red blood cells are produced in the spleen and the epigonal organ ( special tissue around the gonads, which is also thought to play a role in the immune system ).
They are also produced in the Leydig's organ which is only found in cartilaginous fishes, although some do not possess it.
The subclass Holocephali, which is a very specialized group, lacks both the Leydig's and epigonal organ.
By Stalin's death in 1953, the Central Committee had become largely a symbolic organ, which was responsible to the Politburo, and not the other way around.
Their only specialty organ is their eyes, which they harvest as fruit from the Ghanj-Rho eye-tree on their home planet.
The size of an organ frequently determines its growth, as in the case of the liver which grows back to its previous size if a part is removed.
Making an anatomical gift is a separate transaction from being an organ donor, in which any useful organs are removed from the unembalmed cadaver for medical Organ transplant.
The use of this organ is associated with the Flehmen response, in which the upper lip is curled upwards.
Although Schmidt's organ works may resemble others of the era in terms of length, complexity, and difficulty, they are forward-looking in being conceived for the smaller, clearer, classical-style instruments of the Orgelbewegung, which he advocated.
Thus the tonewheel assembly generates 91 frequencies, which are all that are required for the entire organ.

organ and was
The charge was so farfetched that Woodruff paid little attention to it, and answered Pike in a rather bored way, wearily declaring that a `` new hand '' was pumping the bellows of the Crittenden organ, and concluding: `` In a controversy with an adversary so utterly destitute of moral principles, even a triumph would entitle the victor to no laurels.
Mary Dobbs Tuttle was back at the organ.
On departure for Lambaréné in 1913 he was presented with a pedal piano, a piano with pedal attachments ( to operate like an organ pedal-keyboard ).
He was responsible for the destruction of the musical clock organ that Elizabeth I of England sent to the court during the reign of his father.
While bishop he was largely responsible for the construction of a large organ in the cathedral, audible from over a mile ( 1600 m ) away and said to require more than 24 men to operate.
A memorial pipe organ in Convovation Hall, Acadia University is dedicated to the members of Acadia University killed during the First World War A book of remembrance in Manning Chapel, Acadia University was unveiled on 1 March 1998 through the efforts of the Wolfville Historical Society
Salieri responded to the reprimand by saying that the priest's organ playing displeased him because it was in an inappropriately theatrical style.
They include two concertos for pianoforte, one in C major and one in B flat major, ( both 1773 ); a concerto for organ in C Major in two movements, ( the middle movement is missing from the autograph score, or perhaps, it was an improvised organ solo ) ( also 1773 ); two concertante works: a concerto for oboe, violin and cello in D major ( 1770 ), and a flute and oboe concerto in C major ( 1774 ).
Though God commanded instruments to be used in Temple worship, and the daily life of Israel, the first recorded example of a musical instrument in Roman Catholic worship was an organ introduced by Pope Vitalian into a cathedral in Rome around 670.
Until the end of the 19th century, it seems to have been generally assumed that the general meeting ( of all shareholders ) was the supreme organ of the company, and the board of directors was merely an agent of the company subject to the control of the shareholders in general meeting.
The Central Committee was an important organ in the beginning of Brezhnev's rule, but lost effective power to the Politburo.
From then on, until the ascension of Mikhail Gorbachev, the Central Committee played a minor role in the running of the party and state – the Politburo was the highest political organ in the Soviet Union.
At the founding congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party ( the predecessor of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ) Vladimir Lenin was able to gain enough support for the establishment of an all-powerful central organ at the next congress.
This central organ was to become the Central Committee, and it had the rights to decide all party issues, with the exception of local ones.
The plan was to make the Central Committee an organ were discussion took place ; and in this Gorbachev succeeded.
The Central Committee was a collective organ elected at the annual party congress.
It was mandated to meet at least twice a year to act as the party's supreme organ.
The Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic ( RSFSR ) was established in 1956 as an organ whose sole responsibility was handling the affairs of the RSFSR.
The organ itself was abolished in 1966.

organ and built
Eventually they built the first perfusion pump, an invention instrumental to the development of organ transplantation and open heart surgery.
The house featured in the image of Kings Head St to the left, is unique in the town and is an example of a sailmaker's house, thought to have been built circa 1600. Notable public buildings, all later, include the parish church of St. Nicholas ( 1821 ) in a restrained Gothic style, with many original furnishings including a ( somewhat altered ) organ of the same date in the west end gallery, and the Guildhall of 1769, the only Grade I listed building in Harwich.
The Mitchell Hall, built 1896, was donated to the community by Alexander Mitchell Farmer at Redwells Farm. Alexander also donated the first Parish Church organ. The Mitchell Hall is used by local community groups, and is an asset to the wider Fife community.
Keyboards of Halberstadt organ | Nicholas Faber's organ for Halberstadt, built in 1361 and enlarged 1495.
Bruckner was in awe of the monastery's great organ, which was built during the late baroque era and rebuilt in 1837, and he sometimes played it during church services.
By the end of the 19th century, some French organists ( e. g., Charles-Marie Widor and his students Charles Tournemire and Louis Vierne ) named some of their organ compositions symphony: Their instruments ( many built by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll ) allowed an orchestral approach ( Kaye 2001 ; Smith 2001 ; Thomson 2001 ).
Festival Hall contained the largest organ in the world at the time, built by the Los Angeles Art Organ Company.
The cathedral's current organ was built in 1877 by Henry Willis & Sons.
The first properly recorded organ in Bath Abbey was built by Abraham Jordan in 1708.
The abbey's next organ was built in 1836 by John Smith of Bristol, to a specification of thirty stops over three manuals and pedals.
The instrument as it now stands has 63 speaking stops over four manuals and pedals, and is built largely on the Werkprinzip principle of organ layout: the case is only one department deep, except for parts of the Pedal sited at the back rather than the sides of the case.
A four-stop continuo organ was built for the abbey in 1999 by Northampton-based organ builder Kenneth Tickell.
At the same time the small organ that had been built in the nave aisle was moved up into the triforium where it remains, though some time in the sixteenth century it was replaced with a larger one on a raised platform at the western end of the building.
The organof a deep and mellow tone, and highly ornamented by figures in relief — was built at Canterbury sometime around 1700.
The Rozsa Centre has a Bach organ built by Jürgen and Hendrik Ahrend.
It is constructed of local Jacobsville sandstone, and features beautiful stained glass windows, a custom built 19 by 18 pipe organ, and a beautifully painted interior.
The church organ was built between 1886 and 1904 by the Reverend George Buck, who was rector between 1880 – 1907 and son of Dr Zephaniah Buck, organist of Norwich Cathedral.
A flour mill was built in 1870 ; a bank was started in 1871 ; the La Cygne organ factory was another early commercial enterprise, but it did not flourish.
This church, Late Gothic, built in 1466, has frescoes on the ceilings and a remarkable church organ.
The organ in this church was built in 1756.
The 1980-pipe Ferris Tracker organ, originally built in 1847 for Calvary Episcopal Church in New York City, was moved to the Round Lake Auditorium in 1888 and is considered to be the oldest and largest three-manual organ in existence.
The organ was built by the firm of Grant, Degens, and Bradbeer in 1969, in a case designed by George Pace ; somewhat revolutionary at the time, the instrument remains no less remarkable and idiosyncratic today.

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