Product Specifications Poe NVR EN.Indd
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Staff Working Paper No. 845 Eight Centuries of Global Real Interest Rates, R-G, and the ‘Suprasecular’ Decline, 1311–2018 Paul Schmelzing
CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 CODE OF PRACTICE 2007 -
Sears List of Subject Headings
Sears List of Subject Headings Sears List of Subject Headings 21st Edition BARBARA A. BRISTOW Editor CHRISTI SHOWMAN FARRAR Associate Editor H. W. Wilson A Division of EBSCO Information Services Ipswich, Massachusetts GREY HOUSE PUBLISHING 2014 Copyright © 2014, by H. W. Wilson, A Division of EBSCO Information Services, Inc.All rights reserved. No part of this work may be used or re- produced in any manner whatsoever or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any in- formation storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner. For subscription information, contact Grey House Pub- lishing, 4919 Route 22, PO Box 56, Amenia, NY 12501. For permissions requests, contact [email protected]. Abridged Dewey Decimal Classification and Relative Index, Edition 14 is © 2004- 2010 OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. Used with Permission. DDC, Dewey, Dewey Decimal Classification, and WebDewey are registered trademarks of OCLC. Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Publisher’s Cataloging-In-Publication Data (Prepared by The Donohue Group, Inc.) Sears list of subject headings. – 21st Edition / Barbara A. Bristow, Editor; Christi Showman Farrar, Associate Editor. pages ; cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN: 978-1-61925-190-8 1. Subject headings. I. Bristow, Barbara A. II. Farrar, Christi Showman. III. Sears, Minnie Earl, 1873-1933. Sears list of subject headings. IV. H.W. Wilson Company. Z695.Z8 S43 2014 025.4/9 Contents Preface . vii Acknowledgments . xiii Principles of the Sears List . xv 1. The Purpose of Subject Cataloging. -
Puritan New England: Plymouth
Puritan New England: Plymouth A New England for Puritans The second major area to be colonized by the English in the first half of the 17th century, New England, differed markedly in its founding principles from the commercially oriented Chesapeake tobacco colonies. Settled largely by waves of Puritan families in the 1630s, New England had a religious orientation from the start. In England, reform-minded men and women had been calling for greater changes to the English national church since the 1580s. These reformers, who followed the teachings of John Calvin and other Protestant reformers, were called Puritans because of their insistence on purifying the Church of England of what they believed to be unscriptural, Catholic elements that lingered in its institutions and practices. Many who provided leadership in early New England were educated ministers who had studied at Cambridge or Oxford but who, because they had questioned the practices of the Church of England, had been deprived of careers by the king and his officials in an effort to silence all dissenting voices. Other Puritan leaders, such as the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, John Winthrop, came from the privileged class of English gentry. These well-to-do Puritans and many thousands more left their English homes not to establish a land of religious freedom, but to practice their own religion without persecution. Puritan New England offered them the opportunity to live as they believed the Bible demanded. In their “New” England, they set out to create a model of reformed Protestantism, a new English Israel. The conflict generated by Puritanism had divided English society because the Puritans demanded reforms that undermined the traditional festive culture. -
Augustine on Manichaeism and Charisma
Religions 2012, 3, 808–816; doi:10.3390/rel3030808 OPEN ACCESS religions ISSN 2077-1444 www.mdpi.com/journal/religions Article Augustine on Manichaeism and Charisma Peter Iver Kaufman Jepson School, University of Richmond, Room 245, Jepson Hall, 28 Westhampton Way, Richmond, VA 23173, USA; E-Mail: [email protected] Received: 5 June 2012; in revised form: 28 July 2012 / Accepted: 1 August 2012 / Published: 3 September 2012 Abstract: Augustine was suspicious of charismatics‘ claims to superior righteousness, which supposedly authorized them to relay truths about creation and redemption. What follows finds the origins of that suspicion in his disenchantment with celebrities on whom Manichees relied, specialists whose impeccable behavior and intellectual virtuosity were taken as signs that they possessed insight into the meaning of Christianity‘s sacred texts. Augustine‘s struggles for self-identity and with his faith‘s intelligibility during the late 370s, 380s, and early 390s led him to prefer that his intermediaries between God and humanity be dead (martyred), rather than alive and charismatic. Keywords: arrogance; Augustine; charisma; esotericism; Faustus; Mani; Manichaeism; truth The Manichaean elite or elect adored publicity. Augustine wrote the first of his caustic treatises against them in 387, soon after he had been baptized in Milan and as he was planning passage back to Africa, where he was born, raised, and educated. Baptism marked his devotion to the emerging mainstream Christian orthodoxy and his disenchantment with the Manichees‘ increasingly marginalized Christian sect, in which, for nine or ten years, in North Africa and Italy, he listened to specialists—charismatic leaders and teachers. -
The Burney Newspapers at the British Library
Gale Primary Sources Start at the source. The Burney Newspapers at the British Library Moira Goff British Library Various source media, 17th and 18th Century Burney Newspapers Collection EMPOWER™ RESEARCH The collection widely known as the Burney Newspapers Extent of the Collection is now kept among the British Library’s extensive Following their acquisition by the British Museum holdings of early printed books at St Pancras, London. Library, Burney’s newspapers were amalgamated with At its heart is the library of the Reverend Dr Charles others already in the collection (including some once Burney, acquired by the British Museum following his belonging to Sir Hans Sloane, on whose library the death in 1817. The Burney Newspapers comprise the British Museum had been founded in 1753). Burney had most comprehensive collection of early English arranged his collection of newspapers not by title but newspapers anywhere in the world, providing an by date—which presumably helped his own research, unparalleled resource for students and researchers. but made access difficult for later users. As such, the Newspapers are among the most ephemeral issues of a number of different newspapers for a productions of the printing press, and digitisation particular date were grouped together, and were reveals the immense range of this unique collection, usually bound in annual volumes. Later in the 18th while making its content fully accessible for the first century, when many newspapers were being published time. simultaneously, several volumes were needed to cover a single year. However, some issues were arranged by title and then by date within the annual volumes. -
OPUS IMPERFECTUM AUGUSTINE and HIS READERS, 426-435 A.D. by MARK VESSEY on the Fifth Day Before the Kalends of September [In
OPUS IMPERFECTUM AUGUSTINE AND HIS READERS, 426-435 A.D. BY MARK VESSEY On the fifth day before the Kalends of September [in the thirteenth consulship of the emperor 'Theodosius II and the third of Valcntinian III], departed this life the bishop Aurelius Augustinus, most excellent in all things, who at the very end of his days, amid the assaults of besieging Vandals, was replying to I the books of Julian and persevcring glorioi.islyin the defence of Christian grace.' The heroic vision of Augustine's last days was destined to a long life. Projected soon after his death in the C,hronicleof Prosper of Aquitaine, reproduccd in the legendary biographies of the Middle Ages, it has shaped the ultimate or penultimate chapter of more than one modern narrative of the saint's career.' And no wonder. There is something very compelling about the picture of the aged bishop recumbent against the double onslaught of the heretical monster Julian and an advancing Vandal army, the ex- tremity of his plight and writerly perseverance enciphering once more the unfathomable mystery of grace and the disproportion of human and divine enterprises. In the chronicles of the earthly city, the record of an opus mag- num .sed imperfectum;in the numberless annals of eternity, thc perfection of God's work in and through his servant Augustine.... As it turned out, few observers at the time were able to abide by this providential explicit and Prosper, despite his zeal for combining chronicle ' Prosper, Epitomachronicon, a. 430 (ed. Mommsen, MGH, AA 9, 473). Joseph McCabe, .SaintAugustine and His Age(London 1902) 427: "Whilst the Vandals thundered at the walls Augustine was absorbed in his great refutation of the Pelagian bishop of Lclanum, Julian." Other popular biographers prefer the penitential vision of Possidius, hita Augustini31,1-2. -
The Colleges in Siena and Montepulciano (1550S–1620S)
chapter 5 The Colleges in Siena and Montepulciano (1550s–1620s) The “Jesuits” arrived in Siena and its surrounding region before the Society of Jesus was founded, and before their appearance in any other major Tuscan city. Still, they did not open a college in the region until assured of the safety of the one in Florence, and of the conquest of Republic of Siena. This was in keeping with both Medici and Jesuit strategies: it concentrated on urban areas (as the Society preferred), while favoring the most important city of the duchy and helping to subjugate the territory now under ducal power.1 In 1556–57, Diego Laínez, who was at the time vicar general of the Society of Jesus, worked with Fulvio Androzzi and Louis de Coudret, both of whom were former rectors of San Giovannino, as well as several interested Sienese and Florentine parties, to open the Collegio di Siena.2 The initial concerns were predictable. The Jesuits needed money, and, as Laínez admitted, they hoped the ruling family would supply it.3 In addition, Siena was home to known heretics; both the Medici and the Society wanted to stamp out those troublemakers. Meanwhile, in Montepulciano, Polanco, Laínez, and the rectors of Florence acted as they had in Siena, cooperating with several enthusiastic local nobles and capitalizing on the failure of an attempted foundation in Gubbio. In each case, small urban settings, financial difficulties, and local resistance to interference from both a new religious order and a new secular government combined to create strug- gling institutions which sought to transform the religious landscape. -
Price List - Business Solutions
Price List - Business Solutions December 1, 2014 *** Confidential *** Master Case Pk/ Country of Restricted / Part Number Description Warranty SIN UPC Code Ordering MSRP TEXAS DIR Category Pallet Origin Authorized Wireless Wireless AC [802.11ac] DAP-1665 Wireless AC1200 Dual Band Access Point Business 5 1-Year Limited China 790069398032 $ 66.59 $ 119.99 DAP-2660 Wireless AC1200 Dual Band Gigabit PoE Access Point Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069404917 $ 127.64 $ 229.99 DAP-2695 AirPremier AC1750 Simultaneous Dual Band PoE Access Point Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069396816 $ 216.44 $ 389.99 AirPremier® N [802.11n] DAP-2310 AirPremier® N 2.4GHz High Power Access Point Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069368257 $ 61.04 $ 109.99 DAP-2330 Wireless N300 2.4GHz Ceiling Mount High Power Access Point Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069406232 $ 66.59 $ 119.99 DAP-2360 AirPremier® N PoE Access Point with Plenum-rated Chassis Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069345746 $ 88.79 $ 159.99 DAP-2553 AirPremier® N Dual Band PoE Access Point, Selectable Dual Band 802.11n, 300Mbps Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069318191 $ 99.89 $ 179.99 DAP-2590 AirPremier® N Dual Band PoE Access Point with Plenum-rated Chassis, Selectable Dual Band Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069316043 $ 177.59 $ 319.99 802.11n, 300Mbps DAP-2690 AirPremier® N Simultaneous Dual Band PoE Access Point Business 5 Limited Lifetime China 790069331244 $ 172.04 $ 309.99 DAP-3690 AirPremier® N Dual Band Outdoor PoE Access Point Business 2 Limited Lifetime -
Electronic Requirements
Chapter 5 Retail Electric Suppliers Handbook ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS REQUIREMENTS AND PROCEDURES Customer Choice related transactions between ComEd and Retail Electric Suppliers (RESs) are handled electronically via Electronic Data Interchange (EDI). A Communication Protocols Working Group (CPWG) is comprised of Illinois utilities, Retail Electric Suppliers (RESs), customers, and Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) staff. This chapter describes the following aspects of this communication method: What electronic data exchange is How ComEd uses EDI over the Internet RES requirements for electronic transactions Electronic transaction sets and their use The posting of information on the ComEd web site is also covered in this chapter. Most of the requirements and procedures described here result from the Communication Protocols Working Group, which has responsibility for developing common electronic data exchange standards for utilities and RESs operating in Illinois. Documentation: Document Where Found EDI Trading Partner Agreement ComEd’s Electric Supplier Services Department (ESSD) EDI Implementation Guides www.choiceinillinois.com EDI Certification Test Scripts for www.choiceinillinois.com ComEd EDI Implementation Guides for ComEd inbound SBO 810 and https://www.comed.com/MyAccount/MyService/Pages/R outbound SBO 820 ESResources.aspx The Retail Electric Suppliers Handbook is for training and discussion purposes. If any conflict exists between this document and ComEd’s Tariffs, the tariffs prevail. RES Handbook Page 1 of 10 Revised October 2016 Chapter 5 Retail Electric Suppliers Handbook ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE Some information exchanged include customer enrollment and drop requests and responses, historical summary data, meter status changes, monthly meter usage, and bill-ready invoice data and payments. Given the volume of data that is exchanged, automated electronic processes are the best means of handling these transactions in a timely manner. -
A Great Carolingian Panzootic
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Stirling Online Research Repository TIMOTHY NEWFIELDa A great Carolingian panzootic: the probable extent, diagnosis and impact of an early ninth-century cattle pestilenceb Abstract This paper considers the cattle panzootic of 809-810, ‘A most enormous pestilence of oxen the most thoroughly documented and, as far as can be occurred in many places in Francia and discerned, spatially significant livestock pestilence of the 1 Carolingian period (750-950 CE). It surveys the written brought irrecoverable damage.’ evidence for the plague, and examines the pestilence’s spatial and temporal parameters, dissemination, diagnosis and impact. It is argued that the plague originated east of This reference to an epizootic in the Annales Fuldenses in 870 Europe, was truly pan-European in scope, and represented is one of roughly thirty-five encountered in the extant written a significant if primarily short-term shock to the Carolingian sources of Carolingian Europe.2 In total, mid eighth- through agrarian economy. Cattle in southern and northern Europe, mid tenth-century continental texts illuminate between ten including the British Isles, were affected. In all probability, and fourteen livestock plagues, the majority of which affec- several hundreds of thousands of domestic bovines died, ted cattle.3 In no earlier period of European history does the adversely impacting food production and distribution, and written record reveal so many epizootics.4 Cattle pestilences human health. A diagnosis of the rinderpest virus (RPV) is are reported in 801, 809-10, 820, 860, 868-70, 878, 939-42 tentatively advanced. -
Annual Permit Report for the C-4 Emergency Detention Basin
2013 South Florida Environmental Report Appendix 5-3 Appendix 5-3: Annual Permit Report for the C-4 Emergency Detention Basin Permit Report (May 1, 2011–April 30, 2012) Rick Householder Contributors: Shi Kui Xue, Matt Powers, Christopher King, and John Leslie SUMMARY Based on Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) permit reporting guidelines, Table 1 lists key permit-related information associated with this report. Table 2 lists attachments included with this report. Table A-1 in Attachment A lists the specific pages, tables, graphs, and attachments where project status and annual reporting requirements are addressed. This annual report satisfies the reporting requirements specified in the latest modified permit. Table 1. Key permit-related information. Project Name: C-4 Emergency Detention Basin Permit Numbers: EI 13-0192729-001 and EI 13-0192729-004 Issue and Expiration Dates: EI 13-0192729-001 Issued: 9/10/2002; Expires: 9/9/2007 EI 13-0192729-002 Issued: 2/14/2003 EI 13-0192729-003 Issued: 3/4/2003 EI 13-0192729-004 Issued: 9/26/2003; Expires: 9/25/2008 EI 13-0192729-008 Issued: 2/3/2005 EI 13-0192729-010 Issued: 7/2/2007 EI 13-0192729-011 Issued: 9/25/2008 EI 13-0192729-013 Issued: 2/20/2012 Project Phase: I & II Permit Condition Requiring 20 (in EI 13-0192729-013) Annual Monitoring Report: Relevant Period of Record: May 1, 2011 – April 30, 2012 Rick Householder Report Lead: [email protected] 561-682-6582 John Leslie Permit Coordinator: [email protected] 561-682-6476 App. 5-3-1 Appendix 5-3 Volume III: Annual Permit Reports Table 2. -
Unique Finds from the Early 17Th-Century Swedish Warship Vasa
Common people’s clothing in a military context - Unique finds from the early 17th-century Swedish warship Vasa. Anna Silwerulv Vasa Museum, Sweden Abstract Soldiers in the Thirty Years War (1618 – 1648) commonly wore their everyday clothing as uniforms in the modern sense were still rare. Little is known about their gear, since garments from common people are rarely preserved or detailed in paintings and historical sources. The Swedish warship Vasa sank 1628 in Stockholm harbour. The ship was raised in 1961 and about 12,000 fragments of textiles and leather from clothing, shoes, accessories and personal possessions were recovered. The Swedish navy had not yet issued uniforms to their conscripted crews, which makes the finds unique as the largest collection of everyday clothing in a use context from its time. This paper will present preliminary results from the initial phase of a new research project focusing on these find groups, in which we seek knowledge about the objects themselves and what they can tell us about the social structures of both military and civilian society. Content The role of clothing in the military and the idea of uniforms in early 17th-century Europe The unique clothing finds on board the Swedish warship Vasa The Dress Project Methodology Preliminary results References The role of clothing in the military and the idea of uniforms in early 17th-century Europe. Clothes have always had a very important role to play in society. Their powerful visual languages have been used for centuries to express the wearer's personality and way of life as well as social and economic status in society.