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rubric and title
The code title ( rubric ) is Supraventricular tachycardia.
The long title for older Acts is sometimes termed its rubric because it was sometimes printed in red.
As suggested by the title, which speaks of a ' nation ' of gorillas, the author conveys an eyeview of the world from the perspective of primates, effectively demonstrating how people and gorillas are subsumed emotionally, socially, and spiritually under the same rubric.

rubric and for
This was achieved by the insertion of the words ' and oblations ' into the prayer for the Church and the revision of the rubric so as to require the monetary offerings to be brought to the Table ( instead of being put in the poor box ) and the bread and wine placed upon the Table.
From then on until the early 1950s, both national and international competitions involved a changing variety of exercises gathered under the rubric, gymnastics, that would seem strange to today's audiences and that included for example, synchronized team floor calisthenics, rope climbing, high jumping, running, and horizontal ladder.
Health care reform is a general rubric used for discussing major health policy creation or changes — for the most part, governmental policy that affects health care delivery in a given place.
Books that London issued on commission ( paid for by their authors or by some learned body ) were styled ' Henry Frowde ', or ' Humphrey Milford ' with no mention of OUP, as if the Publisher were issuing them himself, while books that the Publisher issued under the rubric of the University bore the imprint ' Oxford University Press '.
Thus, the key rubric for Gramsci and for cultural studies is that of cultural hegemony.
Policies under the rubric of the NEP include subsidies for real estate purchases, quotas for public equity shares, and general subsidies to Bumiputra businesses.
Wolf Vostell also gained recognition for his drawings and objects, such as images of American B-52 bombers, published under the rubric " capitalist realism " and as a result of his inclusion of television sets with his paintings.
Some of the spells introduced at this time claim an older provenance ; for instance the rubric to spell 30B states that it was discovered by the Prince Hordjedef in the reign of King Menkaure, many hundreds of years before it is attested in the archaeological record.
The indictment was of major legal significance and was the first time that sexual assaults were investigated for the purpose of prosecution under the rubric of torture and enslavement as a crime against humanity.
Various sciences study the decomposition of bodies under the general rubric of forensics because the usual motive for such studies is to determine the time and cause of death for legal purposes:
The name Googie remained as a rubric for the architectural style when editor Douglas Haskell of " House and Home " magazine and architectural photographer Julius Shulman were driving through Los Angeles one day.
Philatelists usually classify the 1921-1927 postal issues of " Kenya and Uganda " and " East Africa and Uganda Protectorates " under the KUT rubric, but the first issues spelling out all the names of the colonies came in 1935, in the form of common design commemoratives for the Silver Jubilee of King George V as well as a definitive series featuring a profile of the king and local scenes.
Until the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Khnopff would be responsible for the rubric " Studio-Talks-Brussels " in which he reported about the artistic evolutions in Belgium and continental Europe.
Whether or not such studies should be called cultivation does not seem to be an issue for most researchers ; as a practical matter, numerous scholars are pursuing studies of exposure to genres ( and even to specific single programs ) under the rubric of cultivation.
This diagnostic rubric is not recommended for general use because it is not clearly demarcated either from simple schizophrenia or from schizoid or paranoid personality disorders.
The new singing group, appearing for a while in 1949 under the rubric, " The Nameless Quartet ", changed their name to The Weavers and went on to achieve great renown.
Skeptics argue that the term " New Age movement " is a misnomer, generally used by conspiracy theorists as a catch-all rubric for any new religious movement that is not fundamentalist Christian.
Earlier works had attempted to summarize the semantic differences under the vague ( though preliminarily useful ) rubric of the “ Iconicity Principle ” ( see Huang and Su ( 2005 ) for a succinct discussion ), which basically posits a correlation between the degree of formal compactness of the linguistic material encoding the causative macroevent and the perceived directness of the relationship between causing event () and caused event (): i. e., shorter forms, on the whole, were posited to encode more direct causation than longer forms, as in the classic English I killed him.
The antiphons of the entrance ( introits ) have the gradual order of the mass as a rubric at the margin ( on a verso page as here: left ), i. e. the serial for the day with gradual ( R ), alleluia ( All ) or tractus ( TR ), offertory ( OF ), and communio ( CO ).
Rubrication was used so often in this regard that the term rubric was commonly used as a generic term for headers of any type or color, though it technically referred only to headers to which red ink had been added.
When he is first vested, the subdeacons place the great omophor on him, but afterwards, when the rubric calls for him to wear the omophor, it is replaced, for the sake of convenience, with the small omophor.

rubric and manuscript
For instance, in the Papyrus of Ani, the name " Ani " appears at the top or bottom of a column, or immediately following a rubric introducing him as the speaker of a block of text ; the name appears in a different handwriting to the rest of the manuscript, and in some places is mis-spelt or omitted entirely.
Since the first page of the manuscript contains the rubric, " Liber Montis Gracie.

rubric and reads
The text on leaf 27r, from the first rubric ( line 3 ), reads:

rubric and quando
The use of these additional phrases in honour of the Blessed Virgin Mary was so common that in editions of the Roman Missal earlier than the 1921 revision, the text of the Gloria was followed by the rubric: " Sic dicitur Gloria in excelsis Deo, etiam in Missis beatæ Mariæ, quando dicenda est " ( When the Gloria in excelsis Deo is to be recited, it is recited in this way, even in Masses of Blessed Mary ).

rubric and at
The rubric in the Book of Needs ( priest's service book ) states, " With respect to the Services said at the parting of the soul, we note that if time does not permit to read the whole Canon, then customarily just one of the prayers, found at the end of the Canon, is read by the Priest at the moment of the parting of the soul from the body.
Burrill Bernard Crohn, an American gastroenterologist at New York City's Mount Sinai Hospital, described fourteen cases in 1932, and submitted them to the American Medical Association under the rubric of " Terminal ileitis: A new clinical entity ".
For accurate off-the-tape monitoring during recording on 3-head decks, both processes must be employed at once, and circuitry provided to accomplish this is marketed under the rubric " Double Dolby ".
These less absolute forms may be expressed within the rubric that we cannot control the situations that befall us, but we can at least control our attitudes toward them.
Methods of measuring cohesion vary from qualitative measures classifying the source text being analyzed using a rubric with a hermeneutics approach to quantitative measures which examine textual characteristics of the source code to arrive at a numerical cohesion score.
The Church of England's Common Worship uses it as the Post-Communion prayer, with a rubric stating that it " may be used as the Collect at Morning and Evening Prayer during this week ".
As a common rubric of the Cold War held, a tank parked at the end of an enemy runway is a perfectly valid counter-air weapon.
The rubric containing this direction was added to the Book of Common Prayer in 1662 ; and there is proof that the development of the chimere into at least a choir vestment was subsequent to the Reformation.
Thus, according to Williams, one ought to keep in mind that although there may be dozens of theorists and social activists in the West adhering to the rubric " personalism ," their particular foci may, in fact, be asymptotic, and even diverge at material junctures.
Compositions from the same period with similar traits, particularly works by his pupils Alban Berg and Anton Webern, are often also included under this rubric, and the term has also been used pejoratively by musical journalists to describe any music in which the composer's attempts at personal expression overcome coherence or are merely used in opposition to traditional forms and practices ( Fanning 2001 ).
Notable programs at the school include the International Baccalaureate Program, a rigorous regimen that prepares its candidates on an international rubric and prepares them for further education ; a Chamber Choir that has performed in Europe and New York's Carnegie Hall ; and the Riverview High School Kiltie Band, a group of about 220 musicians that has marched three times in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade.

rubric and time
In 2008, Rich Media, Poor Democracy was awarded the ICA Fellows Book Award, which recognizes books that " have made a substantial contribution to the scholarship of the communication field, as well as the broader rubric of the social sciences, and have stood some test of time.
Since September 11, 2001, the U. S. has used the material witness statute to detain suspects without charge for indefinite periods of time, often under the rubric of securing grand-jury testimony.

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