the Els

Found in 58 Books

File: kt_tacmanual -

10

  • osttiOns will be communicated to other parts of the body, giving ~tain and fatigue. The eyes straight to the front, striking the ground at abotit the distance of fifteen yards. The surest way to keep the elsoulders in line and head erect. Insist tipon it. When the Knights appreciate the importance and under - stand the detaiis of the position—the alpha of the tactics— ~ to the next lesson. Let the Knight

102

  • jur-e Isis usmouth or thio-n~ him on Isis hnnunclics. Time squad us next thrilled at the gallop, the misatructor causinsg it to pass to ti-ne tm-at, armd tisens to the win/k, before salting Wisenever the elsaisge is is-nade fi-om a slow gait to oume more rapid, as from the walk to a tm-at, begin slowly and in - crease it giadually to Use degree prescm-ibed; whenever the change is issade fronms one gait t

File: Stephen Hawking - A Brief History Of Time -

17

  • to reach the event P traveling at or below the speed of light. It is thus the set of events that can affect what happens at P. The events that do not lie in the future or past of P are said to lie in the elsewhere of P Figure 2:5 . A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking... Chapter 2 file:///C|/WINDOWS/Desktop/blahh/Stephen Hawking - A brief history of time/a.html (8 of 12) [2/20/2001 3:14:16 AM]

18

  • ither affect nor be affected by what happens at P. For example, if the sun were to cease to shine at this very moment, it would not affect things on earth at the present time because they would be in the elsewhere of the event when the sun went out Figure 2:6 . A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking... Chapter 2 file:///C|/WINDOWS/Desktop/blahh/Stephen Hawking - A brief history of time/a.html (9 of 12

File: Divine Comedy - 02 - Purgatorio -

  • ecial reason it stands so tall66 [part0022.html#c33-s22-i]66 [part0022.html#c33-s22-i] and is inverted, growing wider at itstop. → [part0029.html#c33-n016] ‘And if vain thoughts had not been water of the Elsa →[part0029.html#c33-n017] → [part0029.html#c33-n018] to your mind, and your delight in them69 [part0022.html#c33-s23-i]69 [part0022.html#c33-s23-i] a Pyramus to make the mulberry turnred, → [part002

File: David Icke - The Hidden Codes in the Bible -

2

  • an begin the research project. (I don't know Greek, so don't ask, "why doesn't he just do it himself?") One last cautionary note before we delve into the prophetic implications. All those involved in the ELS research caution that we don't know enough specific knowledge of how th e Creator of the codes intended a nearness of terms at the same ELS, to apply and form a meaningful set of da ta. For example,

File: History Of Freemasonry Throughout The World Vol 3 -

332

  • ant, the direction of affairs was undertaken by the Grand Chapter . The interval had witnessed Napoleon's crushing defeat at Leipsic, on which occasion the gallant Prince Poniatowski lost his life in the Elster-October i9 . A solemn funeral Lodge was held in his honour, March 1 2, 1814, at which the portrait of the deceased was set up and some of his personal effects were exhibited . By a resolution of t

File: History Of Freemasonry Throughout The World Vol 4 -

271

  • since by emigrants of the same class and by the wretched cargoes of captured slave vessels, acknowledged in 1847 as an independent Republic, governed and well governed too, on the American model, by the elsewhere despised negro race, with a navy of one vessel (a present from England), a college with professorial chairs all filled by negroes-this success- ful outcome of a daringly humane experiment, whic

File: Computer Hacking Basics -

79

  • played. However, if any of these conditions happen to be false (for instance a does not equal b or c equals d ) then the statement on line 15 which reads “I will fight against sleep” will be printed. The else written on Line 15 is a conditional statement, which just like it does in the real world means that if the condition on Line 9 evaluates to false then the statement on Line 11 be skipped and another

80

  • be considered. If the OR statement was used in place of the else statement , it will imply that only one of the conditions on Line 9 will have to be true (either the value in a == b or c != d ) for the statement on Line 11 to be considered and that on Line 15 to

81

  • f is a type of conditional statement used in between the if and else statements. It is used to add several other conditions which if all evaluated to false , will result to the printing of line under the else statement. As utilized in this program, if the condition a > b is false, the line under the else statement –A is less than B- will be printed except the else if condition is true then “A is equal to
  • d several other conditions which if all evaluated to false , will result to the printing of line under the else statement. As utilized in this program, if the condition a > b is false, the line under the else statement –A is less than B- will be printed except the else if condition is true then “A is equal to B” will be printed.
  • will result to the printing of line under the else statement. As utilized in this program, if the condition a > b is false, the line under the else statement –A is less than B- will be printed except the else if condition is true then “A is equal to B” will be printed.

82

  • rom the codes written above, the user inputted the value 1 for the variable a and 3 for the variable b . These values do not meet the condition on Line 14, neither do they meet that on Line 18 and so the else statement is considered. The statement on Line 24 “A is less than B is printed.” Loops: A loop in C++ can be said to be a circular path through which

84

  • t leads to the break out of the loop) and the break statement are brought directly under Line 13 that asks for user input so that upon the input of a value -1 by the user, the loop will be broken and the else statement printed. In a situation where a value aside from -1 is inputted, the statement on Line 12 will be printed out after which Line 13 will request an input from the user for variable b . Again

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  • acters W e have incorporated more break statements at the end of each check, so if the conditional statement evaluates to true , the program should jump the loop and move on to the next task. Also in the else part where we have the switch statement with cases under it; for all the characters we see ranging from the parenthesis, backslash, forward slash, exclamation mark etc. in the figure below, they are

File: Packt Mastering -

78

  • k whether the number is divisible by two. If the remainder is equal to zero, it is concluded that the number is divisible by true , which is why the if block is executed; if the condition is not met, the else block is executed. The output of the preceding program will be something similar to the following screenshot when executed in a Windows-based environment:

File: H P Blavatsky - Collected Writings Volume XI (1889) -

22

  • s it but an acknowledgment, a tacit assurance that the work is written in a way to meet with clerical approbation ? And, as all know that now-a-days there are few priests or preachers, who, unless of the Elsmere type, would ever accept Ain-Soph or Parabrahm as a substitute for Jehovah, the dismay of the student is but very natural. In our century the Kabala—or “Qabbalah” as the author spells it—has no wo

File: Jim Marrs - Above Top Secret, Uncover the Mysteries of the Digital Age (2008) -

153

  • ill made out a list of Texas School Book Depository employees. Heading this list was the name Harvey Lee Oswald with an address of 605 Elsbeth in Dallas. Of course, his name was Lee Harvey Oswald and the Elsbeth address was never given nor recorded on his TSBD employment records. During the time of the House Select Committee on Assassina - tions, a Lt. Col. Robert E. Jones of the 112th Military Intellige

File: Jim Marrs - Crossfire - The Plot That Killed Kennedy -

  • rleans. This military file erroneously gave Oswald’s addressas 605 Elsbeth, the same mistake found on Revill’s list.Oswald had lived at 602 Elsbeth in late 1962 and early 1963 but had since moved,and the Elsbeth address had never been given to his employers at the Depository.And, of course, his name was Lee Harvey Oswald. It seems evident, based on thisinformation, that military intelligence tipped off t

File: The Giver 1 - The Giver -

  • ours.For the next two weeks, as the time for the December Ceremony approached, TheGiver would transfer every memory of courage and strength that he could toJonas. He would need those to help him find the Elsewhere that they were bothsure existed. They knew it would be a very difficult journey.Then, in the middle of the night before the Ceremony, Jonas would secretly leavehis dwelling. This was probably t

  • sliced through the snow and the wind whipped at his face as they sped in astraight line through an incision that seemed to lead to the final destination,the place that he had always felt was waiting, the Elsewhere that held theirfuture and their past.He forced his eyes open as they went downward, downward, sliding, and all atonce he could see lights, and he recognized them now. He knew they were shiningt

File: MUFON Journal - August 1978 -

20

  • hers'Words The August 22 issue of NATIONAL ENQUIRER reported on the UFO flap which took place in the Syracuse, N.Y., area during March and April of this year. The UFO and cattle mutilation cases from the Elsberry, Mo., area are detailed in the August 29 ENQUIRER. NASA official Charles Kubokawa is quoted as saying that UFOs represent a highly-advanced technology in the September 19 ENQUIRER issue. This is

File: Michael Tsarion - Atlantis, Alien Visitation And Genetic Manipulation -

12

  • e who were cast down”). There are many names that have come down to us that were used to describe the visitors. Some of these are: Anakim, Rephaim, Djinn, Giants, Titans, Fallen Angels, the Watchers, the Els, the Ari, Elders,

250

  • ommerce. (See p. 31) Book of Job Placed in Arabia, the tale is one of a believer in the Solar Cult being contested by Satan, the representa- tive of the Serpent Cult. (See p. 33.) Levites Servants of the Els, later of the Temple of Solomon. (p. 33) When the Israelites did not correctly server their masters, they were sold to other masters. Such is the testimony of the Old Testament. In II Chronicles Jeho

File: Michio Kaku - Visions - How Science Will Revolutionize the Twenty-first Century -

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  • not good or evil. It's just knowledge." But knowledge is power, and power is inherently a political and social question. To help clarify the essential issues at stake with the genetics of the future, the ELSI has come out with simple guidelines for dealing with some of these thorny ethical issues. What they advocate is this: Fairness for allno genetic discrimination The right to privacyprevent disclosure

File: From Neuroscience To Neurology -

5

  • evier’s Science & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone: ( + 44) 1865 843830, fax: ( + 44) 1865 853333, e-mail: [email protected]. You may also complete your request on-line via the Elsevier homepage (http://elsevier.com), by selecting “Customer Support” and then “Obtaining Permissions.” Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Application submitted British Library Catalog

File: Gould - History of Freemasonry Throughout the World Vol. 3 (1936) -

332

  • ant, the direction of affairs was undertaken by the Grand Chapter . The interval had witnessed Napoleon's crushing defeat at Leipsic, on which occasion the gallant Prince Poniatowski lost his life in the Elster-October i9 . A solemn funeral Lodge was held in his honour, March 1 2, 1814, at which the portrait of the deceased was set up and some of his personal effects were exhibited . By a resolution of t

File: Gould - History of Freemasonry Throughout the World Vol. 4 (1936) -

271

  • since by emigrants of the same class and by the wretched cargoes of captured slave vessels, acknowledged in 1847 as an independent Republic, governed and well governed too, on the American model, by the elsewhere despised negro race, with a navy of one vessel (a present from England), a college with professorial chairs all filled by negroes-this success- ful outcome of a daringly humane experiment, whic

File: David Icke - The Hidden Codes in the Bible -

2

  • an begin the research project. (I don't know Greek, so don't ask, "why doesn't he just do it himself?") One last cautionary note before we delve into the prophetic implications. All those involved in the ELS research caution that we don't know enough specific knowledge of how the Creator of the codes intended a nearness of terms at the same ELS, to apply and form a meaningful set of data. For example, if

File: Compilers Principles Techniques and Tools -

262

  • e grammar (4.14) of Section 4.3: we cannot tell whether if expr then stmt is the handle, no matter what appears below it on the stack. Here there is a shift/reduce conflict. Depending on what follows the else on the input, it might be correct to reduce if expr then stmt to stmt, or it might be correct to shift else and then to look for another stmt to complete the alternative if expr then stmt else stmt.

415

  • + to a pair of children. Similarly, the node labeled if represents the application of an operator if to a triple formed by its children (for type checking, it does not matter that either the then or the else part will be evaluated, but not both). Figure 6.29: Abstract syntax tree for the function definition in Fig. 6.28 From the body of function length, we can infer its type. Consider the children of th

416

  • straints on t than S does. If null(x) is true, then length(x) is 0. Thus, the type of length must be "function from list of a to integer." This inferred type is consistent with the usage of length in the else part, length(tl{x)) + 1. • Since variables can appear in type expressions, we have to re-examine the notion of equivalence of types. Suppose E\ of type s s' is applied to E 2 of type t. Instead of s

File: Dragon Book -

262

  • r then stmt INPUT else ··· $ we cannot tell whether if expr then stmt is the handle, no matter what appears below it on the stack. Here there is a shift / reduce confli c t. Depending on what follows the else on the input, it might be correct to reduce if expr then stint to stmt, or it might be correct to shift else and then to look for another stmt to complete the alternative if expr then stmt else stmt

415

  • + to a pair of children. Similarly, the node labeled if represents the application of an operator if to a triple formed by its children (for type checking, it does not matter that either the then or the else part will be evaluat ed, but not both). fu n // � length x if /I� apply 0 + / "" / "" null x apply 1 / "" length apply / "" tl x Figure 6.29: Abstract syntax tree for the function definition in Fig.

416

  • traints on t than S does. If nUll(x) is true, then length(x) is O. Thus, the type of length must be "function from list of a to integ er." This inferred type is consistent with the usage of length in the else part, length( tl( x )) + 1. D Since variables can appear in type expressions, we have to re-examine the notion of equivalence of typ es. Suppose El of type 8 -+ 8' is applied to E2 of type t. Instea

File: Linux Socket Programming By Example -

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  • attern of 1110. This causes the address to be classified as a class D address. Note for class D and class E, the netmask is set to 255.255.255.255 because the entire address is a network address. 10. The else statement in line 62 evaluates everything remaining as a class E address, and sets the netmask also to 255.255.255.255 (see step 9). 11. The results of the classification are reported in lines 67 to

319

  • test returns true, then the socket c does have its corresponding bit enabled within the set, and the first block of C code is executed. Otherwise, the socket c is not considered part of the set, and the else block of statements is executed instead.

File: OReilly - Beginning Linux Programming - 3rd Edition -

79

  • oblems with this very simple script. It will take any answer except yes as meaning no . We can prevent this by using the elif construct, which allows us to add a second condi- tion to be checked when the else portion of the if is executed. Try It Out—Doing Further Checks with an elif We can modify our previous script so that we report an error message if the user types in anything other than yes or no .
  • xecuted. Try It Out—Doing Further Checks with an elif We can modify our previous script so that we report an error message if the user types in anything other than yes or no . We do this by replacing the else with elif and then adding another condition. #!/bin/sh echo “Is it morning? Please answer yes or no” read timeofday if [ $timeofday = “yes” ] then echo “Good morning” elif [ $timeofday = “no” ]; the

File: Professional Assembly Language -

180

  • This is the code to print the answer for the b variable, which was contained in the else part of the If state- ment. First the b variable value is retrieved and manually placed on the stack, and then the location of the output text (located at the .LC0 label) is placed on the stack. Wit
  • e “Optimizing Branch Instructions” section later in this chapter. The assembly language code used to implement an if statement looks like the following: if: <condition to evaluate> jxx else ; jump to the else part if the condition is false <code to implement the “then” statements> jmp end ;jump to the end else: < code to implement the “else” statements> end: Of course, this was a trivial example of an If

181

  • < else logic code > end: This If statement condition required two separate CMP instructions. Because the logical operator is an OR , if either CMP instruction evaluates to true, the program jumps to the else label. If the logical operator is an AND , you would need to use an intermediate label to ensure that both CMP instructions evaluate to true. for loops The next statement to tackle is for loops. Her

455

  • ubexpression Elimination ( cse ) technique scans through a jump instruction looking for destination code that is not reached via any other means within the program. The most common example of this is the else part of if-then- else statements. ❑ -frerun-cse-after-loop: This technique reruns the Common Subexpression Elimination routines after any loops have been optimized. This enables loop code to be furt

473

  • ly language coding skills. Generic if-then code Chapter 6 also presented a generic formula for implementing if-then logic within assembly language code: if: <condition to evaluate> jxx else ; jump to the else part if the condition is false <code to implement the “then” statements> jmp end ;jump to the end else: < code to implement the “else” statements> end: 442 Chapter 15 18_579010 ch15.qxd 1/7/05 11:05

476

  • he original condition of the if-then statement is true and the then part is performed. This incorporates loading the first input value into the first local variable value and jumping to the end code. The else part of the if-then-else logic starts at the .L3 label. Note that before the label, a new direc- tive is used, the .p21align directive. You have already seen the .align directive in Chapter 5, “Movi

File: compiler -

55

  • d the tools such as the notation and the procedures NewLabel and PostLabel), it’s a piece of cake to extend the parser to include other constructs. The first (and also one of the trickiest) is to add the ELSE clause to IF. The BNF is IF <condition> <block> [ ELSE <block>] ENDIF The tricky part arises simply because there is an optional part, which doesn’t occur in the other constructs. The corresponding

56

  • stLabel(L1) } <block> ENDIF { PostLabel(L2) } Comparing this with the case for an ELSE-less IF gives us a clue as to how to handle both situations. The code below does it. (Note that I use an ’l’ for the ELSE, since ’e’ is otherwise occupied): { Recognize and Translate an IF Construct } procedure DoIf ; var L1 , L2 : s t r i n g ; begin Match ( ’ i ’ ) ; Condition ; L1 := NewLabel ; L2 := L1 ; EmitLn ( ’

58

  • LOOP <block> ENDLOOP and the syntax-directed translation is: LOOP { L = NewLabel; PostLabel(L) } <block> ENDLOOP { Emit(BRA L } The corresponding code is shown below. Since I’ve already used ’l’ for the ELSE, I’ve used the last letter, ’p’, as the "keyword" this time. { Parse and Translate a LOOP Statement } procedure DoLoop ; var L : s t r i n g ; begin Match ( ’p ’ ) ; L := NewLabel ; PostLabel (L ) ;

62

  • e I’m sort of proud of. On the face of it a BREAK seems really tricky. My first approach was to just use it as an extra terminator to Block, and split all the loops into two parts, just as I did with the ELSE half of an IF. That turns out not to work, though, because the BREAK statement is almost certainly not going to show up at the same level as the loop itself. The most likely place for a BREAK is rig

212

  • yours truly, do just that. But there is one place you absolutely CANNOT type a semicolon, and that’s right before an ELSE. This little gotcha has cost me many an extra compilation, particularly when the ELSE is added to existing code. So the C/Ada choice turns out to be better. Apparently Nicklaus Wirth thinks so, too: In his Modula 2, he abandoned the Pascal approach. Given either of these two syntaxes

File: Gale Encyclopedia Of Psychology -

258

  • at consistency of thought is a strong motivating factor in people. Continues research at the New School Festinger continued his work at Stanford until 1968 when he returned to New York City to assume the Else and Hans Staudinger professorship at the New School for Social Research. He continued his research on cogni- tive dissonance as well as other behavioral issues. He w as also active in professional o

File: Hidden Codes In The Bible -

3

  • One last cautionary note before we delve into the prophetic implications. All those involved in the ELS research caution that we don't know enough specific knowledge of how the Creator of the codes intended a nearness of terms at the same ELS, to apply and form a meaningful set of data. For example, if

File: Earth's Ionosphere, 2nd Edition - Plasma Physics & Electrodynamics -

7

  • m Elsevier’s Science & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone: (+44) 1865 843830, fax: (+44) 1865 853333, E-mail: [email protected]. You may also complete your request on-line via the Elsevier homepage (http://elsevier.com), by selecting “Customer Support” and then “Obtaining Permissions.” Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kelley, Michael C. The earth’s ionosphere : p

File: Encyclopedia Of The Solar System -

5

  • nce & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone (+44) (0) 1865 843830; fax (+44) (0) 1865 853333; email: [email protected]. Alternatively you can submit your request online by visiting the Elsevier web site at http://elsevier.com/locate/permissions, and selecting Obtaining permission to use Elsevier material Notice No responsibility is assumed by the publisher for any injury and/or damage

File: Psychedelic_Review_08 -

19

  • e co n c epts and t o lo c a l ize these changed lev- lar and subcellular sites and 3 ) manipulati o n o f the vari o us enzy- matic s teps whi c h pr o vide the b i oc he m i cal c lues with whi c h the els in terms of the c ellular co mpa r tments in whi c h they m ight be pha r ma co logist can estab li sh relati o nships t o fun c ti o n, o c c urring. F o r example, with tl_e simple technique empl o

File: Cosmic Awareness Newsletters -

29

  • hat deep within the bowels of this earth is a computer, which is beyond the under- standing of present science, which was placed here ap roximately one million years ago b a race of entities known as the Els, or Elders, who have since transcen cf ed time and s ace and moved into at which is Celestria. f X This Awareness indicates these entities also known as the Elohim, his Awareness indicates that these

82

  • MORE INFO ON THAT COMPUTER PLACED INSIDE THE EARTH BY THE ELS fMORE ON THE ELOHIM AND PARALLEL UNtVERSEl QUESTION : Some years back, Awareness discussed briefly the computer placed deep inside the earth eons ago by the Els. Would Awareness please give more info

154

  • an-type Divine or alien from whom the Pleiadeans, UFO CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS - :those from Sirius, and the earth humans were created; these ARE THESE OF ANY SIGNIFICANCE? being what would be termed the Els or Elohim. The Greys as having created other types of creatures. QUESTION: This Awareness indicates that the sex drive of humans we received a news release the other day. IV~ l&e to as that which was

230

  • y the Enlil. there is that fall from such grace wherein the entity learns The Enlil Reptoid group later were called by the Hebrew, to think, to polarize, to understand good and evil and the Elohim or the Els. This Awareness indicates that then is cast into actions that require that the entity struggle the first Adam type of creature did not have the cap- with thought, for survival. acity for having sex,

File: Souls Of Distortion Awakening -

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  • es can be found in any book! To prove this fact Brendan McKay of the Australia Nati onal University took a page from the book ‘Moby Dick’ and proved that the follo wing words could be extracted using the ELS algorithm: Princess Diana, Royal, Dodi , Henri Paul, Mortal in these jaws of death. For many it is absolute proof that the Bible Codes are just random and bear no inherent meaning. However Drosnin de

File: Sri Aurobindo - Life Divine -

448

  • these alternative conclusions the second, as it is usu- ally put before us, offers no ground for the philosophic reason, since we have no satisfying indication of the connection between the here and the elsewhere which are posited against each other but not explained in the inevitability of their relations, and there is no light cast on the necessity or fundamental significance of the ordeal and failure

File: Stephen Hawking - A Brief History Of Time -

17

  • to reach the event P traveling at or below the speed of light. It is thus the set of events that can affect what happens at P. The events that do not lie in the future or past of P are said to lie in the elsewhere of P Figure 2:5 . A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking... Chapter 2 file:///C|/WINDOWS/Desktop/blahh/Stephen Hawking - A brief history of time/a.html (8 of 12) [2/20/2001 3:14:16 AM]

18

  • ither affect nor be affected by what happens at P. For example, if the sun were to cease to shine at this very moment, it would not affect things on earth at the present time because they would be in the elsewhere of the event when the sun went out Figure 2:6 . A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking... Chapter 2 file:///C|/WINDOWS/Desktop/blahh/Stephen Hawking - A brief history of time/a.html (9 of 12

File: Stephen Hawking - A Brief History of Time -

File: US Army Field Manual - Combat Skills -

104

  • e dressing from its plastic envelope and twist it to break the paper wrapper. Place the dressing on the wound without letting it touch anything Grasp the folded dressing with both hands (do not touch the else.

File: Esotericism and the academy - rejected knowledge in western culture -

347

  • eries” had, after all, played a role in the“esotericism” of the ancient Pythagoreans, and this is how the substantivecame to be understood in Jacques Matter’sHistoire critique du gnosticismeof1828.289The Elsassian scholar Jacques Matter (1791–1864) held professorshipsin history, philosophy, and religion at the University of Strasbourg, andmarried a granddaughter of the important Christian theosopher Fr ́

File: Forlong - Rivers of Life (2) -

609

  • ement makes astonisbed archeologists exclaim, “In honour of what were all these beautiful surroundings? It must be for yonder low and rude looking rock of dusky limestone rising some 6 to 8 feet over the elsewhere tesselated floor. See, it is carefully railed round and narrowly watched over, and canopied and draped with costly silks. They call it the Ebn Shatiê, ‘the priceless treasure, around which the

File: glauber -

190

  • put all luto a clean copper veseel rhich1s not grcasyr arrd boll l.t upoa a soal fi're as loug or aoEerbat long-6er than Jrou uEe to bo1l aB ogg, or at tbe furtheet baLf a quarter ofaa bour; take off the elsun ln bolllng, let tt rtand t111 lt be ElIk-tarDr ao that lt ray be druah. Thia potlon teetlng aluost llke rarnrlae areetened rltb auger, glve unto tbe patlelt to drlnlc, and let tulnfaet upon 1tr and

File: gluabertwo -

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  • understa-ad rhat 1e slgni-fled by those lords, rlgbt tbence reap uost profltabLe Frult. lhe Truthof thle ls eufflclently proved by the trltlngs of eaclent Phllosopbers;also by the Books of MOSES, and the Elstorles of tbe Prophets. For allthese, or the greatest part of then, do lndeed need another erpllcationtthan the Letter 1t self !eer6 to lnfer, becauee 6otre occult natter ls lutbat contalaed.Ia llke r

File: Book_II_original -

56

  • vea Klac, eld aeyc! Eare of Coru, acventy:/cara of plelty, e^nd eevea ycers of acar{.c1ty; tld la aunbera aeycDCalvee lGro ollcrcd on tbc scvcnth day; end BALA.IM crcctcd scvcn A]tcre;aeveD daya HABI the elstcr of AAnOn reat lortb lcproue out of tbe Celp;eld ta JOSEUI lcvott Prlcete cerrlcd the Ark of the Covenaat before theEoet; a€Ycn days tbey rent round the Cltlea; and aevca Trutpcte rerecarllcd by th

File: Dairys_John_Dee -

57

  • e chamber, you shall know what to do.' il: 'Benedictus Deus in donis suis: et sanctus in omnibus ope rib us eius. Amen.' Ended hor. 4K Mr Talbot went. 6 May. JftHe, iH ft fflftnellstls rftge ftf 8 sf the elselt ftt Hight fill nl4 1t1'l6 s:ll tftltt fti~ht: find fleX! fft6rftiftg till 8 sf the eleele, melftflehelie ana eftelerie {efriel, fer {fie e6Seflift~ . . . S6ffte tlsea. til!:!:. e6ftle t:6 me 8:S 8

File: Kvideland_Scandinavian_Folk_Belief_an -

81

  • wshoes could be heard scrapingagainst the outside wall. She would pull the rope, without the soldiernoticing it, so he would think that one of the hill folk was after her.You see, when a girl who had the elsk did not give in to a "hillman," she lost her mind —unless she was rescued by a soldier.The "hill man" was a supranormal being. One traditional remedyagainst an elsk inflicted by such a lover was to

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  • 60 The Human Soulthe dead. The motif of the dead complaining of the elsk can befound in Eddie poetry and in folk ballads.Collected from Johanne Marie Kristensdatter in S0heden, Jyl-land (Denmark), Printed in E. T. Kristensen, Danske sagn 2 (1893),312.7. Hug-messageThroug

File: Booth_Nicholas_Lucifer_Rising -

  • l historians have noted a discrepancy in the reported dates for the two,which seem to stem from Walter Schellenberg’s own memoirs, The Labyrinth, firstpublished in 1952. It is a matter of record that the Elser bomb exploded onThursday, 8 November 1939; the Venlo incident the following morning, Friday, 9November 1939.The most readable and useful summary of the events in Munich and Elser’s lifewhich preced

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  • pyramids and the sword of HCGlte must be performed to pierce any rdalicltory or attrclCted entities that may helVe attcmpted to attach themselves to the subtle selves. Traversing the elstral pLme v"hen perforrning this v'.'Ork is done in shifted form. Often this is because it is necessary to conceal one's identity, but also because the astral forms of night's hunters afford in their

File: ss198710 -

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  • approach to the great sophisticated and positive approach to the great issues of magic, philosophy, and metaphysics.issues of magic, philosophy, and metaphysics.Elsewhere in occultism, groups such as the Elsewhere in occultism, groups such as the Wiccans and the O.T.O. seemed comfortably Wiccans and the O.T.O. seemed comfortably accepted by society as odd but welcome inhabitants accepted by society as od

File: ss199212 -

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  • souls working in concert toward our goal. It is of souls working in concert toward our goal. It is noteworthy, as the Recognition announcement noteworthy, as the Recognition announcement elsewhere in the elsewhere in the ScrollScroll points out, that Priests points out, that Priests McAtee and Van Patten are our first new III°s McAtee and Van Patten are our first new III°s ordained under the Temple’s rec

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  • n mind that if you want to talk about forces and angles and vibrations and card layouts and whatever angles and vibrations and card layouts and whatever else, you can do so if you are able to restate the else, you can do so if you are able to restate the entire thing in simple and direct language which, entire thing in simple and direct language which, minus any mystical hype, would easily explain minus

File: Ethnicity in Ancient Amazonia. Reconstructing Past Identities from Archaeology, Linguistics, and Ethnohistory -

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  • een working intensively on the Amerindian languages of the Guyanas since 1996. Her strong focus is on descriptive and anthropological linguistics. She has pub­lished several articles, among others in the Elsevier Encyclopaedia of Language and Linguistics (2006), and is author of the comprehensive volume A Grammar of Trio,

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  • odes of multiple temporality in this chapter and end with some thoughts on the persistent connection of Islam to the precolonial elsewhen in the dreamscapes and landscapes of contemporary North India.THE ELSEWHEN OF RITUALSWhose are the stately whitewashed tombs? The Sufi saints. Whose are the dark abandoned tombs? Kings unknown. The contrast is vivid and dramatic.—Carl ErnstCarl Ernst poses these questi

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  • have suffered a lot of grief, seen a lot of poverty. If you desire it everything is possible.Baba sahib pak, the plaint is that our niece, whose name is K _______, has been missing for 21 days. . . . THE ELSEWHEN OF DREAMSThe structure that is known as Pir Ghaib is all that remains of a four-teenth-century hunting lodge built by Firoz Shah Tughlaq (fig. 5). It stands on the crest of the hilly Delhi Ridge

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  • lhi disrupt the linear, chronological progression of historical time, where the subject of study is irrevocably in the past, but they still significantly index the medieval.THE OPTICAL (UN)CONSCIOUS: THE ELSEWHEN OF CINEMA AND OTHER DREAM-IMAGESManohar Lal lives in East Delhi, across the river, but was born in a his-toric suburb of Old Delhi called Paharganj, in the locality of Nabi Karim, very close to

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  • shes of His essence and a face among His faces. all existences have a single which is the that bestows upon all that which bestows the upon all and that which bestows essence upon all essences. It is the else is its states. It is else is its effusions. It is what is other than it is its manifestations and unovl-;ucuu'-'"· He the First and the the Outward and the Inward" the prayers handed down by there "

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  • FLATTENING A PROCESS 2 SHSBC-374 – 19.3.64 FALSE PURPOSE RUNDOWN 432 FPRD the process was just doing enough to cure the elsewhereness of the pc. Trying to get him into the room. Now, if you don’t know that there are two different directions in processing, then you will seldom have a pc in front of you to be audited. And y

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  • tdefenders take our powers of MENTAL REPRESENTATION tobe strikingly similar to our powers of linguistic representa-tion. Neither language nor thought are stimulus bound: wecan both speak and think of the elsewhere and the elsewhen.Both language and thought are counterfactual: we can bothspeak and think of how the world might be, not just how itis. We can misrepresent the world; we can both say andthink t
  • r powers of MENTAL REPRESENTATION tobe strikingly similar to our powers of linguistic representa-tion. Neither language nor thought are stimulus bound: wecan both speak and think of the elsewhere and the elsewhen.Both language and thought are counterfactual: we can bothspeak and think of how the world might be, not just how itis. We can misrepresent the world; we can both say andthink that it is infested

File: Dulce Book -

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  • rther than our own unconscious minds in order to find the "aliens". In fact, from one perspective the following might be true: "We have found the aliens, and they are us!" - Branton) TAL continues: "'The ELs' will engage 'The DRACO' in battle around this Planet. Most will die. REVELATION 12:7: 'Now war arose in Heaven, Michael and his Angels fighting against http://www.thewatcherfiles.com/dulce/chapter26

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  • 141 T H E UF O DIARIES spaces in the abyss as enormous encryption devices, formed either by design or geologic providence to store the sum of cosmic knowledge known by the Els, the Solar System’s originary alien species. The data exists now solely in the form of pure sound, a perfectly balanced standing wave of information that endlessly echoes off the polished walls of th

File: William Henry ARK OF THE CHRISTOS -

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  • on one another. They wear high-tech clothing with attachments symbolized as wings, horns, and even fish scales. Each of these symbols indicated divine power and royal blood. The Bible also calls them the ELs, an ancient word that is found in many other languages including: the Sumerian EL, “brightness,” “shining,” Akkadian ILU, “radiant one,” Babylonian ELLU, “the shining one,” Old Welsh ELLU, “a shining

File: William Henry THE CRYSTAL HALLS OF CHRIST'S COURT -

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  • CHRIST’S COURT 306 As the Roman guards sleep, Jesus rises in triumph from his tomb; a 12 th -century French enamel and gilded copper plaque. In the runic tradition, the rune Donar or Thor symbolized the Els (the Ana). Thor, ‘the Born-Again’, who overcomes the wintry power of darkness and Earth, is represented as a figure with upraised arms. His rune is the sign of the upraised arms or a Y, the rune k ,

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  • om another spiritual dimension. When one has burned off impurities one becomes the purified person. They become a Shining One or a Cathar. Moses’ and Jesus’ invocation of the demonstrates that though the Els or Shining Ones were known to the Hebrews, the esoteric Hyperborean secrets of light were not widely accepted by mainstream Judaism whose religious system is not strongly mythological, or Christianit

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  • erstandi ng of the language or the concept being discussed. For example, in English the A-B-L-A-T inscription is widely interpreted to read Baalat . This is meaningful since Baal was the name for all the Els or gods, including the goddess Hathor, in the Old Testament. From this we might conclude that the Sarabit sphinx had something to do with the baal, or with Hathor in particular. But that is just one

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