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vision and bore
Shade uses this information to his advantage and uses his echo vision to bore a hole in the cathedral and allow himself to escape.
Tradition has it that, the night before the battle, Constantine had a vision that he would achieve victory if he fought under the Symbol of Christ ; accordingly, his soldiers bore on their shields the Chi-Rho sign composed of the first two letters of the Greek word for " Christ " ( ΧΡΙΣΤΌΣ ).

vision and fruit
These are usually animals that need fine depth discrimination / perception ; for instance, binocular vision improves the ability to pick a chosen fruit or to find and grasp a particular branch.
" The College was the fruit of Kurt Hahn's vision and the work of men such as the founding Headmaster Rear Admiral Desmond Hoare, Antonin Besse, who donated St Donat's Castle for the College's premises, and Air Marshal Sir Lawrance Darvall.
Jesus ' teachings would later diverge from John's apocalyptic vision ( though it depends which scholarly view is adopted ; according to Ehrman and Sanders, the apocalyptic vision was the core of Jesus ' teaching ) which warned of " the wrath to come ," as " the axe is laid to the root of the trees " and those who do not bear " good fruit " are " cut down and thrown into the fire.
Lehi saw Sam in his vision of the tree of life, noting that he ate the precious fruit, symbolizing the righteousness of Sam, and that he would be saved.
In Lehi's vision of the tree of life, Sariah eats the precious fruit, symbolizing that she is righteous and will be saved.
Although his visionary desire to unite the factions in the Church and to encourage lay apostolic activity did not bear fruit within his lifetime, he did his utmost to encourage this vision in others.
What can be found all over the world is the fruit of his vision in the form of City Missions, practical religion outside the walls of the church.
Four of the six figures are facing the tree, representing those who ate of the fruit in Lehi's vision, and the Laman and Lemuel figures are facing away representing their rejection of the tree.
No doubt the vision of fruit cultivation on large scale originated with the immigrant Chinese farmers of old, who subsequently influenced the local Muruts and the localised immigrant Lundayehs to venture into this very lucrative activities.

vision and schools
According to History Professor John Boles ' recent book University Builder: Edgar Odell Lovett and the Founding of the Rice Institute, the first president's original vision for the university included hopes for future medical and law schools.
In the seals of schools in the Philippines, the torch symbolizes the vision of education to provide enlightenment to all the students.
There was also an " office of the future ," a climate-controlled " farm factory ," an automated offshore kelp and plankton harvesting farm, a vision of the schools of the future with " electronic storehouses of knowledge ," and a vision of the many recreations that technology would free humans to pursue.
The movement of the tassel may have served to distract opponents, and some schools further claim that metal wires or thin silk cords were once worked into the tassels for impairing vision and causing bleeding when swept across the face.
Their schools largely reflected their approaches to introducing forestry in the United States: Fernow advocated a regional approach and Schenck a private enterprise effort in contrast to Pinchot's national vision.
The Schaefer School's mission is to address the challenges facing engineering and science now and into the future while remaining true to the vision of the founders of Stevens as one of the first dedicated engineering schools in the nation.
During these early years, Lyon gradually developed her vision for Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, which would resemble Grant's schools in many respects but, Lyon hoped, draw its students from a wider socioeconomic range.
To realize our vision, we must change the organization of the University in critical areas such as the review of the number of schools and departments, reorganize the central administrations, prepare a long-term academic strategy and let it drive the physical planning of the University, orient the University around the goal of creation of a learning environment for students.
A Quaker and protégé of Judge Archibald Murphey, Worth championed the cause of free public schools, and, though he belonged to the greatly outnumbered Whig party, gained much stature for his practicality and vision.
Village colleges were the brainchild of Henry Morris, the then Chief Education Officer for Cambridgeshire, who had a vision of a school that would serve the whole community, stem migration from the countryside to the towns, and provide a decent education to pupils who had previously only been served by the upper years of Elementary schools.
Soon after, in 1867, these schools consolidated to form the Howard School following the vision of the Freedmen ’ s Bureau chief General Oliver O. Howard who erected a building on a tract of land generously donated by seven prominent African-American men – Matthew N. Leary, Andrew J. Chestnutt, Robert Simmons, George Grainger, Thomas Lomax, Nelson Carter, and David A. Bryant – who together paid $ 136 for two lots on Gillespie Street in Fayetteville and formed among themselves a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees to maintain the property for the education of local black youth.
The stated goal of NEA's work is encapsulated in its vision: " building great public schools for every student.
In addition to protecting their member's interests, provincial associations also undertake public interest initiatives such as providing vision screening for children in schools, or organizing professional development seminars.
The schools had been run for many years by a single board of trustees with a similar mission and vision.
# Independent schools " own themselves " ( as opposed to public schools owned by the government or parochial schools owned by the church ) and govern themselves, typically with a self-perpetuating board of trustees that performs fiduciary duties of oversight and strategic duties of funding and setting the direction and vision of the enterprise, and by delegating day to day operations entirely to the head of school.
Men of vision, energy, and determination, all were graduates of reputable medical schools.
Ohio University at Athens, Ohio was one of the first schools to incorporate use of the Diana in beginning and graduate photography programs as a way of stimulating creative vision without undue reliance upon camera features and technology.
* " L. A. Unified's faulty vision for schools on Ambassador site ", Christopher Hawthorne, Los Angeles Times, July 18, 2010
DSS schools are required by the government to issue annual prospectuses, which must contain stipulated classes of information such as vision, mission and objectives of the school, class structure, curriculum, achievements in public exams, extra curricula activities, school fees etc.
The floats have an annual theme, usually an elaboration on " Let's get together and have fun ", the avowed mission and vision statement of Moomba and are usually from sister cities ( of which Melbourne has six ), schools and community groups.
Reform states that its vision is of a Britain with 21st-century healthcare, high standards in schools, a modern and efficient transport system, safe streets and a free, dynamic and competitive economy.

vision and New
Even as early as the 1920s he held a vision for school students of New Zealand to be involved in planting native trees and plants in their school grounds.
In a vision in the New Testament Book of Revelation, an angel called Abbadon is shown as the king of an army of locusts ; his name is first transcribed in Greek as " whose name in Hebrew Abaddon " ( Ἀβαδδὼν ), and then translated as, " which in Greek means the Destroyer " ( Apollyon, Ἀπολλύων ).
Some authors believe that Bacon's vision for a Utopian New World in North America was laid out in his novel New Atlantis, which depicts a mythical island, Bensalem, located somewhere between Peru and Japan.
They are also known to form polyspecific groups with tamarins, perhaps because Goeldi's Marmosets are not known to have the X-linked polymorphism which enables some individuals of other New World Monkey species to see in full tri-chromatic vision.
Learned and ignorant alike were astonished at the spectacle ... It is a real and palpable vision of the New World.
Indeed, after her disbelieved first report of a resurrection vision, Mary Magdalene disappears from the New Testament.
" Future together ", as the name implies, is opposed to a racial vision of New Caledonian society, which divides into opposing camps Melanesians native inhabitants and European settlers, and is in favor of a multicultural New Caledonia, better reflecting the existence of large populations of Polynesians, Indonesians, Chinese, and other immigrants.
An idealised vision of the new British settlement was given in the novel by Therese Forster, Abentheuer auf einer Reise nach Neu-Holland on a Voyage to New Holland, published in the German women ’ s magazine, Flora for 1793 and 1794:
According to the New Testament, in AD 49 or 50 the city was visited by the apostle Paul who was guided there by a vision ().
The result was the New Poems, famous for the " thing-poems " expressing Rilke's rejuvenated artistic vision.
New York Times writer Peter Watrous declared in a concert review: " He has perfected an odd vision of popular music, one in which eccentricity and imagination beat back all the pressures toward conformity ".
Future events are also taken into account, such as the coming forth of scripture even after the Book of Mormon, that would make truths known which were taken out from the New Testament, a concept discussed in the several passages of this vision.
His colonisation programs were over-elaborate and operated on a much smaller scale than he hoped for, but his ideas influenced law and culture, especially his vision for the colony as the embodiment of post-Enlightenment ideals, the notion of New Zealand as a model society, and the sense of fairness in employer-employee relations.
MSI's Board of Directors selected Waldemar Kaempffert, then the science editor of The New York Times, because he shared Rosenwald's vision.
Unusual among the New World monkeys, they are monochromats, that is, they have no colour vision, presumably because it is of no advantage given their nocturnal habits.
The Harvesters ( 1565 ) is at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, which comments, " Bruegel created a watershed in the history of Western art, suppressing the religious and iconographic associations of earlier depictions of the seasons in favor of an unidealized vision of landscape.
It may be inferred that this speech depicted Lang's personal vision of the past, present and future of New South Wales and Australia's place in the British Empire and world, ( to read this speech, refer to ' Stirring Australian Speeches ', edited by Michael Cathcart and Kate Darian-Smith ).
Bacon was born in a frontier log-cabin in Tallmadge, Ohio, the youngest daughter of a Congregationalist minister, who in pursuit of a vision had abandoned New Haven for the wilds of Ohio.
The vision of constructing a town on the Hernando-Pasco border was conceived in New York City, in 1924, by Joseph Joscak, editor of a Czechoslovakian newspaper.
Owen and his twenty-two-year-old son, William, sailed to the United States in 1824 to purchase a site to implement Owen's vision for " a New Moral World " of happiness, enlightenment, and prosperity through education, science, technology, and communal living.
Despite the community's shortcomings, Owen was a passionate promoter of his vision for New Harmony.
Although Robert Owen's vision of New Harmony as an advance in social reform was not realized, the town did become a scientific center of national significance, especially in the natural sciences, most notably geology.

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