Directory of Weights and Measures Officials and Metrologists in the United States and Territories
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Pentecostal History
Pentecostal History By Tim Naab Psalms 19:7 The law of the LORD is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple. Isaiah 8:16-20 Bind up the testimony, seal the law among my disciples. And I will wait upon the LORD, that hideth his face from the house of Jacob, and I will look for him. Behold, I and the children whom the LORD hath given me are for signs and for wonders in Israel from the LORD of hosts, which dwelleth in mount Zion. And when they shall say unto you, Seek unto them that have familiar spirits, and unto wizards that peep, and that mutter: should not a people seek unto their God? for the living to the dead? To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them. "The loud speaker or singer believes that his self-induced hypnotic trance is *enthusiasm and he believes that this means that god is within. He doesn't know that Philo coined this word to describe those afflicted, as in Corinth, with enthus o mania - just momentary insanity. Philo "developed a doctrine of ecstasy or ek-stasis, which means standing outside oneself.' This is the highest form of piety which lies beyond faith. This mysticism unites prophetic ecstasy with *'enthusiasm', a word which comes from en-theos-mania, meaning to possess the divine. From this there comes finally the fully developed mystical system of the Neo-Platonists, for example, of Dionysus the Areopagite. -
Commencement 1961-1970
THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Conferring of Degrees at the close of the eighty-seventh academic year JUNE 11, 1963 Keyser Quadrangle Homewood 1 i ORDER OF PROCESSION The Graduates Marshals ! 1 I 11 N | \\n 5 ITER a R IDDOR Carl F. Chrisi \i \ dn N \sqn \\'. [ohn Gryder I*i i i .ii" P>. Taylor William H. Hugcins Robert \\'a(;n: Richard A. NfACKSEY Charles M. Wylie R. F. Wright J. Hums Miller Theodore * Tli e Faculties Marshals James W. Polltney and John Walton * The Deans, The Trustees anel Honored Guests Marshals Nathan Edelman and M. Gordon Wolman * The CIuiplain The Presentor of the Honorary Degree Candidate The Commencement Speaker The President of the University Chief Marshal Walter S. Koski * For the Presentation of Diplomas Marshals Maurice J. Bessm an Edwin S. Mills Clifford A. Hopson W. Kelso Morrill The ushers are undergraduate students of The Johns Hopkins University ORDER OF EVENTS Milton Stover Eisenhower, President of the University, presiding PROCESSIONAL CROWN IMPERIAL — W. WALTON John H. Eltermann, Organist The audience is requested to stand as the Academic Procession moves into the area and to remain standing until after the Invocation and the singing of the National Anthem. INVOCATION The Reverend T. Guthrie Speers Chaplain, Goucher College * THE NATIONAL ANTHEM THE UNIVERSITY ODE * CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREE OTTO F. KRAUSHAAR Presented by Maurice Mandelbaum * ADDRESS OTTO F. KRAUSHAAR President Goucher College * CONFERRING OF DEGREES ON CANDIDATES Presented by Dean G. Heberton Evans, Jr.: BACHELORS OF ARTS Presented by Dean Robert H. Roy: BACHELORS OF ENGINEERING SCIENCE MASTERS OF SCIENCE IN ENGINEERING • DOCTORS OF ENGINEERING ORDER OF EVENTS CONFERRING OF DEGREES ON CANDIDATES Continued Presented by Dean Richard A. -
TO POPE BENEDICT XVI and HIS FELLOW BISHOPS on the Occasion of the Pope’S April 2008 Visit to the United States
TO POPE BENEDICT XVI AND HIS FELLOW BISHOPS On the occasion of the Pope’s April 2008 visit to the United States Please join Voice of the Faithful (VOTF) in calling all Catholics to transform our Church. Join your voice with thousands of others who must raise our voices through petition because the Pope has scheduled no discussions or listening sessions with ordinary laity. Will he hear the concerns of the faithful without such conversations? We Catholics are still addressing the clergy sex abuse scandal, one of the worst crises in the history of our Church. One-third of those raised Catholic in the U.S. no longer call themselves Catholics, accord- ing to a recent survey. Numbers of priests are declining; many parishes and schools are closing; we face massive financial crises. Voice of the Faithful, with more than 35,000 members, proposes concrete solutions to address this crisis: 1. Treat survivors of sexual abuse with the justice and compassion our faith demands. 2. Hold bishops accountable to the people they serve. 3. Embrace full participation of Catholic men and women in Church decision-making. 4. Require full financial transparency and accountability in all governance matters. We believe these steps will produce: ▪ An open, transparent and accountable Church ▪ A participative Church embracing the gifts and talents of the baptized ▪ A Church governed by compassion, informed by justice, empowered by equality, and animated to act collegially We urge all clergy to listen to the voices of the faithful as we join together to inspire our Church to become a community of believers worthy of our founder, Jesus Christ. -
Budget Committee Cuts Groups' Funding by Maria J
Heavy metal Cycling preachers in motion Christian band rebels against satanism Helpful hints for motorcycle and bicycle safety H ENTERTAINER PAGE 4 & 5 FEATURE PAGE 4 815 86, No. 32 The San Jose State University Volume Serving Corn munity Since 1934 Thursday, March 13, 1986 Budget committee cuts groups' funding By Maria J. Gunter approximately $.184,1100. said Scott Davies, accept payments for Pacific Bell or other total amount requested, more than three take advantage ot that money,- trarg said. Daily staff writer budget committee chairman. local utilities, Smalls said. At present, the times its 1985-86 allocation of $4,375, the sheer He said some of the groups didn't use the After three hours reviewing budget re- The A.S. Business Office was the only business office accepts payments for PG&E. size of the increase would make it highly money last year and the funds were then quests Tuesday, the Associated Students group the budget committee recommended to The Women's Resource Center/ Womyn's probable that funds would he used in a less given to another ICS(' member group. Budget Committee cut a net total of $8,551 receive more than the amount asked in its Week budget request received the largest than efficient manner. The A.S. should have more control of its from amounts requested by four campus or- funding request. The business office's re- cut, down $7,917 from the requested $13,791. The Intercultural Steering Committee's allocations to the ICSC. Rose said. ganizations. quest was increased from $196,269 to $205,146 The budget committee recommended that funding request was reduced by $6,685 to The member groups should apply di- "The committee cut amounts of to allow for a 5 percent cost of living increase the group receive $5,874. -
SENATE 415 Him
1942 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 415 him. His sincE:rity I admit. His patriot ENROLLED BILL SIGNED· to the Committee of the WhC'1P. House on the ism, of course, as that of every other state of the Union. Mr. KIRWAN, from the Committee on Mr. NICHOLS: Select Committee to Investi Member, is not questioned. I am not Enrolled Bills, reported that that com- gate Air Accidents. House Resolution 125. :finding fault. This is' not personal. I am . mittee had examined and found truly Resolution creating a Select COmmittee to )ust trying to get on the record the fact enrolled a bill of the House of the follow Investigate Air Accidents; without amend that these men had behind them a record ing title, which was thereupon signed by ment (Rept. No. 1592). Referred to the Com of lawlessness and violence and the use the Speaker: mittee of the Whole Hous& on the state of of force to stop production. the Union. H. R. 5095. An act to set aside certain lands Mr. VOORHIS of California. As Ire Mr. FULMER: Committee on Agric-glture. in Oklahoma for the Cheyenne-Arapaho H. R. 6359. A bill granting relief to certain call, it was Mr. Frankensteen who was Tribes of Indians; and to carry out certain agricultural producers in stricken areas who in California at the time of the North obligations to certain enrolled Indians under suffered crop failures in 1941 because of ad American strike, and he certainly stood tribal agreement. verse weather conditions, insect pests, or other behind the President in the action he ADJOURNMENT uncontrollable natural causes; with amend took there and kept production going. -
The ORU Witness Oral Roberts University Collection
Oral Roberts University Digital Showcase The ORU Witness Oral Roberts University Collection 4-1964 The ORU Witness Oral Roberts University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalshowcase.oru.edu/oru_witness Recommended Citation Oral Roberts University, "The ORU Witness" (1964). The ORU Witness. 2. http://digitalshowcase.oru.edu/oru_witness/2 This Periodical is brought to you for free and open access by the Oral Roberts University Collection at Digital Showcase. It has been accepted for inclusion in The ORU Witness by an authorized administrator of Digital Showcase. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - - - A'•• -- • :- Ir ~---=---- _ the instrument seemed to hit a fun JF)fil(Q) ny bone. The boy laughed in spurts. JFJIJLJ]] "What's the matter . some OF THE NEW WITNESS thing tickle you?" the doctor smiled as he asked the question. "You know, I sat in a doctor's office in Tampa, Jimmy, when you get the baptism Florida last week-not as a patient, with the Holy Spirit, you'll have but as an observer. On the wall be a tickle in your soul." The father hind his desk were the impressive nodded and beamed, apparently in credentials of his profession. harmony with the statement. His manner was calm and as There is nothing forced or un sured, his actions deliberate but un natural about this living witness. It hurried. The young and old came comes with quiet power and a deep to him and there was always that motivation from within. This dedi warm rapport between the sufferer cated layman preaches and witnesses and the good doctor. -
Real Estate This Week
20 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Friday. July 6, 1984 ‘Mad person with match’ sought in rooming house fire BEVjERLY,BEVERLY, Mass. (U P I) — match. someonesomeone had had to tolet let him him in.” in." ownerowner or or at at a a former former fellow fellow tenant. tenant. OneOne personperson dieddied leapingleaping fromfrom a a oldold brotherbrother andand theirtheir 773-year-old I n t I t ft 1* 0 Irwxleimr* n* af ncmniA urhrs e O I/ 4 rx # £ A A A 'Tha r\t*ol I tv\t n O nnSlOA e xt f ka «>j4 _ a t naM * l A .a* V>a«a>aa W Investigators are looking at "W e're looking at people who O'Keefe said a |S,000 reward The preliminary cause of the third-story window and 13 others grandmother — have been identi Manchester native is now Teacher’s fight back Is Customers won’t \ former residents as prime sus have-lived here in the past," said would be offered to anyone provid state’s deadliest fire since 1942 was were trapped in the inferno which fied. Authorities said five others pects for having set a fire that State Fire Marshal Joseph A. ing information leading to the announced within an hour after started 4:20 a.m. Wednesday. were burned beyond recognition, Senate committee director an exercise In courage pay for Seabrook] killed at least 14 people in a O'Keefe. "W e’re looking at anyone arrest and conviction of the O’Keefe declared that all bodies slowing the identification process. -
The Gilmers in America
^ 1 / / Boston Public Library Do not write in this book or mark it with pen or pencil. Penalties for so doing are imposed by the Revised Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. This book was issued to the borrozver on the date last stamped below. FORM NO. 609; 6,12.33: 575M. THE GILMERS IN AMERICA BY JOHN GILMER SPEED With a Genealogical Recoi^d, Compiled by LOUISA H. A. MINOR ' A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches.' PRINTED FOR PRIVA TE DISTRIBUTION New York, 1897 c THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF DR. GEORGE GILMER THE FIRST OF GILMERS IN AMERICA AND THE FOUNDER OF A FAMILY OF WHICH THIS BOOK IS AN INADEQUATE RECORD. PREFACE. The editor of this little book permits it to go to press with full consciousness that it is imperfect, both as a record and a narrative. It would be withheld if he had any hope that he could correct the imperfections which will be manifest to all w^ho read it. He has endeavored to secure infor- mation of interest and value, and in this he trusts that in a measure he has succeeded. But he has not been able to secure full information. If the faults of the work be only those of omission he will be glad, for such he could not avoid. The members of the family, when applied to, have expressed a cordial interest in the w^ork and have supplied the material from which this nar- rative and these records have been constructed. -
Libby, Mont. You Can Meet Misfortune with It at the Same Time That It Keeps Al| 3 Matai Dalicioui Froi«N Dauartt Fortitude
Thursday, August 25, 1938 THE WESTERN NEWS. LIBBY. MONTANA PAGE THREE »c«cacaeæic*cæ*c»c«Lae9c«3Cicsc^c«c«cac*L4caca( : last week where they will visit fur ****'******'***'*'*■****» ****** Bicycle Riders’ Safety Code. ««fc*****»********^^ a few days before school starts. How many parents realize the Mr. and Mrs. Durham and fam danger their children are in when ily of Volcour were business callers they are innocently peddling down T in Libby Sunday evening. the roads on their bicycles? In the FORTINE Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kirkpatrick 25 YEARS AGO Church News ^C*C*C»C<C*C^C*C»C»C»C*C**»:'»C»:<C»C»C»:»C»:»:»» were callers in Libby Thursday United States last year there were ************** » »»»»*» > > » > where Mr. Kirkpatrick purchased 40,300 persons killed in automobile accidents. Statistics show that of First Lutheran Church. I Percy Gaylord returned on Sat-ia car- | (From the file of the Western News) this number 810 w’ere bicycle deaths. | urday from Glacier park where he „Mrs. Frank Bolles and Mrs E. N. | _, f. , Divine services on Sunday morn- : had been emnloved Woodward were business calleri in twenty live years ago scnooi Approximately 35,000 people were ing at 11:00 a. m. Sunday school Tir iv V, „ __, _ I ihhv Fririav opened in Libby on Sept. 2. Prof. injured in collisions between bi- William Hellenga and mother : > yM Kirknatrick Neff was superintendent and there cycles and motor vehicles and 400 at 9:45 a. m. WM6 m ?3MSpetJ v left Saturday morning for narts in were other teachers in the of the above deaths came to chil- ; W. -
9Ommencement Vrogram
Official Degree List . Approved by the University Faculty and the State Board of Higher Education (9ommencement Vrogram The seventy-fifth annual Commencement of the University of Oregon at McArthur Court, Sun day afternoon, the fifteenth of June, nineteen hundred and fifty-two. <9rdrr of ~xrrrjsrs Processional-Ceremonial Air Purcell UNIVERSITY INSTRUM!tNTAL ENS!tMBL!t DONALD M. ALLTON, Mus.M., Organist; ROBIiIlT VAGNEIl, M.Mus., Director Invocation R!tv. HENRY MACFADD!tN, B.A., B.D. Pastor, Eldorado Count)' Federated Church Placerville, California Greeting from the State Board of Higher Education GEORG!t F. CHAMB!tRS, B.S. Memher, State Board of Higher Education Address-"The Peril of Conformity" R!tv. ROBERT J. MCCRACK!tN, D.D., S.T.D., L.H.D. Pastor, Riverside Church, New York City Conferring of Degrees HARRY K!tNN!tTH NEWBURN, Ph.D. President of the University Oregon Pledge Song .......... ... Evans UNIVltRSITY INSTRUM!tNTAL ENS!tMBL!t Benediction REV. JOHN E. M!tRN!tR, B.A., B.D. Executive Secretary, University Y.M.C.A. Recessional-Triumphal March Vierre UNIVERSITY INSTRUM!tNTAL ENSEMBL!t The audience will please <emain seated during the processional and the re cessional, and will refrain from applause during the conferral of degrees. [ 3 ] Rtcognition for illightst £,cholarship DONALD W. ACKER GRETCHEK GROKDAHL G,l!RALD DUANE BERREKAN GENE ELVIN JOHNSON CATHERINE FRANCES BLACK J. WILLIAM JONES MEREDITH VAYLE BURCH WAYNE LOUIS NORTON DONNA LUCIA BUSE JACKIE MARIE PRITZEN FENTON H. BUTLER ANN LOUISE THOMPSON JANICE E. SCHNEIDElt EVANS VIRGINIA ALICE WRIGHT Rtco,gnition for illiyh £,cholarship BARBARA KENT ALDERMAN MARJORIE BERLEMAN MUIRDEN DONALD S. -
Pastors and Churches Embrace Social Media
Orange County Edition Vol. 24, No. 7 July 2013 www.christianexaminer.com Movies Education Phil Cooke New documentary Study shows many charter Should we support FREE chronicles trials and schools fare no better ‘Christian’ projects tragedies of Laurie, others than public schools from Hollywood? page 2 page 3 page 4 Pastors and churches embrace social media By Lori Arnold VENTURA — Criticscs whowho say churcheschurches are stodgy, irrelevant and outout of touch, may want to think again, especially whenwhen it comes to thethe fastfast-- paced advances of sociall media.media. According to a June surveysurvey by Barna Group,Group, 21 percent of churches aree using Twitter, while 7070 per- cent have adopted Facebookbook as a communication re-re- source. Those numbers refl ect a signifi cant change Evelyn Komuntale, founder of Outreach to Africa, hugs children at the Paul Devlin over just two years ago,, whenwhen 1414 percentpercent of Academy, which the ministry operates. churches reported usingg Twitter and 57 percent tapping into Facebook.cebook. It’s not just savvy youngng peoplepeople fu- Royal ambassador eling the connection foror churches,churches, the survey found. Twitteritter usage among clergy was a percentagepercentage Former princess ministers in point higher on Twitterr (23(23 per- cent), but lagged a few popointsints (66 impoverished Ugandan village percent) for Facebook. Pastoral use over that time was mostmost sig- By Lori Arnold would ultimately order that his nifi cant for Twitter withth a 77 granddaughter be turned over to percent increase, whilee Face- IRVINE — At 6 years old Evelyn the father, King Kituku forced his book connections increasedreased Komuntale suddenly found herself daughter to hide young Evelyn by 12 percent. -
September 2013
In this issue . VOLUME XXXVIV(3) • SEPTEMBER 2013 AGLP 2013 Award Winners 1 Roy Harker, Executive Director Editor’s Column 2 Eric Yarbrough, MD President’s Column 3 Kenneth Ashley, MD Vice-President’s Column 4 Eric Yarbrough, MD International Meetings 4 Gene Nakajima, MD JGLMH Updates 5 Mary Barber, MD AGLP Booth Volunteers Roy Harker, Executive Director 5 IPS Philadelphia Roy Harker, Executive Director 6 Upcoming Subspecialty Meetings 7 Caitlin Ryan receives the 2013 John Fryer Award from Mary Barber, M.D., Chair of the Fryer Award Committee, Kenn Ashley, MD Phil Bialer, M.D., APA Caucus Representative, and Kenn Ashley, M.D., President of AGLP. More Pictures of the APA San Francisco Annual Meeting follow on page 11. Photos by Eric Yarbrough AGLP Meeting Minutes 8 Jonathan Weiss, MD, Secretary AGLP 2013 Award Winners Welcome to our new Members 10 The Executive Board of the Association of Gay and Lesbian Psychiatrists AGLP Annual Meetings Photos conferred several awards at the AGLP Annual Awards Reception at 11 Eric Yarbrough, MD Congregation Sha'ar Zahav, in San Francisco, on Monday, May 20, 2013. AGLP Sponsors 13 Alan Schwartz, M.D., was selected for the 2013 James Paulsen Award for outstanding contributions on behalf of the LGBT Community Membership Forms 14 and service to AGLP through his work as Editor of the Journal of Gay and Lesbian Mental Health. Alan, working as Co-editor in Chief of the Journal for the past five years along with Mary Barber, M.D., has been in private practice in New York City for the past sixteen years, conducting psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, psychopharmacology and clinical supervision, after completing a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in HIV Alan Schwartz, M.D.