Site banner
.
Home Forums Blogs Articles Photos Videos Contact FAQ                    
.
.
Wisdom Archive
Body Mind and Soul
Faith and Belief
God and Religion
Law of Attraction
Life and Beyond
Love and Happiness
Peace of Mind
Peace on Earth
Personal Faith
Spiritual Festivals
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Guidance
Spiritual Inspiration
Spirituality and Science
Spiritual Retreats
More Wisdom
Buddhism Archives
Hinduism Archives
Sustainability
Theology Archives
Even more Wisdom
2012 - Year 2012
Affirmations
Aura
Ayurveda
Chakras
Consciousness
Cultural Creatives
Diksha (Deeksha)
Dream Dictionary
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpreter
Dreams
Enlightenment
Essential Oils
Feng Shui
Flower Essences
Gaia Hypothesis
Indigo Children
Kalki Bhagavan
Karma
Kundalini
Kundalini Yoga
Life after death
Mayan Calendar
Meaning of Dreams
Meditation
Morphogenetic Fields
Psychic Ability
Reincarnation
Spiritual Art, Music & Dance
Spiritual Awakening
Spiritual Enlightenment
Spiritual Healing
Spirituality and Health
Spiritual Jokes
Spiritual Parenting
Vastu Shastra
Womens Spirituality
Yoga Positions
Site map 2
Site map


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum





Bookmark and Share
.

Organ

A Wisdom Archive on Organ

Organ

A selection of articles related to Organ

We recommend this article: Organ - 1, and also this: Organ - 2.
organ, Organ

ARTICLES RELATED TO Organ

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - History

During the silent movie era and into the early 1930s, theatre organs were built in large numbers, in a variety of sizes, filling the gap between a simple piano accompaniment and a full orchestra. Indeed, when theatre owners hired orchestras to accompany silent movies, they frequently included a pipe organ to provide relief to the orchestra, and to play for less-expensive showings. After the development of sound movies, theatre organs remained installed in many theatres to provide live music between features. However, after the 'golden ...

See also:

Theatre organ, Theatre organ - Background, Theatre organ - History, Theatre organ - Technical, Theatre organ - Current Status, Theatre organ - The Theatre Organ's Future

Read more here: » Theatre organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - History

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - History

The development of organic farming is one of methods and markets. It is also largely the history of the organic movement, which began as an insiders group of agricultural scientists and farmers, and later expanded to become a grassroots consumer cause. Initially, organics focused on the methods, as a definite reaction against the industrialization of agriculture, and remained below the awareness of the food buyer. Only when the contrasts between organics and the new conventional agriculture became overwhelming, did organics rise to the attention of the public, creating a distinct organic ...

See also:

Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Soil fertility, Organic farming - Pest control, Organic farming - Crop planning, Organic farming - Livestock, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Pre-World War II, Organic farming - Post-World War II, Organic farming - 21st Century, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - The future

Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - History

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - Background

Many organ builders supplied instruments to theatres. The Rudolph Wurlitzer company, to whom Hope-Jones licensed his name and patents, was the most prolific and well-known manufacturer (2,234 were built), and the phrase Mighty Wurlitzer was the hallmark of quality. Many of the innovations which furthered the evolution of theatre organ design simply allowed it to do its job better. Although not all of these ideas originated with Robert Hope-Jones, he was the first to successfully employ and combine many of these innovations with ...

See also:

Theatre organ, Theatre organ - Background, Theatre organ - History, Theatre organ - Technical, Theatre organ - Current Status, Theatre organ - The Theatre Organ's Future

Read more here: » Theatre organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - Background

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - The future

Organic farming is at a crossroads. Despite the growth in the organic food market over the last decade, the future of the small, independent farmer, organic or otherwise, is as much in jeopardy now as it has been in recent decades. The local infrastructure to support small farmers is all but non-existent in most developed nations - the current food distribution system favors high-volume production, and large farming operations. What is commonly known as "organic farming" may chan ...

See also:

Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Soil fertility, Organic farming - Pest control, Organic farming - Crop planning, Organic farming - Livestock, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Pre-World War II, Organic farming - Post-World War II, Organic farming - 21st Century, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - The future

Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - The future

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Overview

Organic farming excludes the use of synthetic inputs, such as synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, and genetically modified organisms (GMOs). In many countries the use of veterinary drugs is excluded. In a number of countries, including the US, Bulgaria, Iceland, Norway, Romania, Switzerland, Turkey, Australia, India, Japan, the Philippines, Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Argentina, Costa Rica, Tunisia, and in the EU, organic farming is also defined by law, so that the commercial use of the term organic to describe farming and f ...

See also:

Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Soil fertility, Organic farming - Pest control, Organic farming - Crop planning, Organic farming - Livestock, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Pre-World War II, Organic farming - Post-World War II, Organic farming - 21st Century, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - The future

Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Overview

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Business organizations - Attributes

As theorists such as Ronald Coase have pointed out, all business organizations represent an attempt to avoid certain costs associated with doing business. Each is meant to facilitate the contribution of specific resources - investment capital, knowledge, relationships, and so forth - towards a venture which will prove profitable to all contributors. Except for the partnership, all business forms are designed to provide limited liability to both members of the organization and external investors. Business organizations originated with ...

See also:

Business organizations, Business organizations - Common types, Business organizations - Attributes, Business organizations - Business organizations as an area of study

Read more here: » Business organizations: Encyclopedia II - Business organizations - Attributes

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s

Electronic organ - The spinet organ. Following World War II, most electronic home organs were built in a configuration usually called a spinet organ, which first appeared in 1949. These compact and relatively inexpensive instruments became the natural successors to the reed organs. They were marketed as competitors of home pianos and often aimed at would-be home organists who were already pianists (hence the name "spinet," a small upright piano). The instrument's design reflected this concept: the spinet organ ph ...

See also:

Electronic organ, Electronic organ - Early history, Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s, Electronic organ - The spinet organ, Electronic organ - The chord organ, Electronic organ - The console organ, Electronic organ - The modern electronic organ

Read more here: » Electronic organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organization XIII - Members

The Members are presented by assigned number order; the numbers show seniority of the members with 1 being the most senior, and 13 being the newest member. They all also receive titles indicating their role in Organization XIII and their personality, elemental powers and their own breed of primitive Nobodies. Organization XIII - 1. Xemnas. Previously known by fans as the Enigmatic Man, Xemnas (whose name is an anagram of Ansem’s name with an 'X' added to it), the "Seeker of Darkness" ...

See also:

Organization XIII, Organization XIII - Background, Organization XIII - Members, Organization XIII - 1. Xemnas, Organization XIII - 2. Xigbar, Organization XIII - 3. Xaldin, Organization XIII - 4. Vexen, Organization XIII - 5. Lexaeus, Organization XIII - 6. Zexion, Organization XIII - 7. Saix, Organization XIII - 8. Axel, Organization XIII - 9. Demyx, Organization XIII - 10. Luxord, Organization XIII - 11. Marluxia, Organization XIII - 12. Larxene, Organization XIII - 13. Roxas, Organization XIII - Nobody

Read more here: » Organization XIII: Encyclopedia II - Organization XIII - Members

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic reduction - Organic reductions

Several reaction mechanisms exist for organic reductions: Direct electron transfer in one-electron reduction with the Birch reduction as example Hydride transfer in reductions with for example Lithium aluminium hydride Hydrogen reductions with a catalyst such as the Lindlar catalyst or the Adkins catalyst. Disproportionation reaction such as the Cannizzaro reaction Reductions that do not fit in any reduction reaction mechanism and in which just the change in oxidatio ...

See also:

Organic reduction, Organic reduction - Organic reductions, Organic reduction - Organic oxidations

Read more here: » Organic reduction: Encyclopedia II - Organic reduction - Organic reductions

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Issues

Intense debate surrounds all aspects of organic farming and organic food. Environmentalists, food safety advocates, various consumer protection, social justice and labor groups, small independent farmers, and a growing number of food consumers - among others - are ranged against agribusiness and many existing and proposed government agricultural policies. The controversy centers around the overall value and safety of chemical agriculture, with organic farming popularly regarded as the "opposite" of modern, large-scale, chemical-based, ...

See also:

Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Soil fertility, Organic farming - Pest control, Organic farming - Crop planning, Organic farming - Livestock, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Pre-World War II, Organic farming - Post-World War II, Organic farming - 21st Century, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - The future

Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Issues

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Methods

Organic farming incorporates scientific knowledge and comprehensive traceability with traditional farming practices, based on knowledge and techniques gathered over thousands of years of agriculture to improve the social, economic and ecological sustainability of agricultural systems. It is easiest to describe by contrasting it with modern commercial techniques. In general terms, organic farming involves natural processes, often taking place over extended periods of time, and a holistic approach, while chemical-based farming focuses o ...

See also:

Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Soil fertility, Organic farming - Pest control, Organic farming - Crop planning, Organic farming - Livestock, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Pre-World War II, Organic farming - Post-World War II, Organic farming - 21st Century, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - The future

Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Methods

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Productivity

A 22-year farm trial study by Cornell University published on July 13, 2005 concluded that Organic farming produces the same corn and soybean yields as conventional farms, but consumes less energy and contains no pesticide residues. However, a prominent 21-year Swiss study found an average 20% lower organic yields over conventional methods, along with 50% lower expenditure on fertilizer and energy, and 97% less pesticides[2]. A major US surv ...

See also:

Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Soil fertility, Organic farming - Pest control, Organic farming - Crop planning, Organic farming - Livestock, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Pre-World War II, Organic farming - Post-World War II, Organic farming - 21st Century, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - The future

Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Productivity

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organization XIII - Background

The first six members of Organization XIII are Nobodies of assistants of Ansem in his experiments in darkness. The assistants and Ansem built an underground facility in Hollow Bastion, where they conducted experiments with the heart, using themselves as test subjects. After speaking with the off-worlder, King Mickey, Ansem saw the immorality of what he was doing and ceased his involvement. The assistants and their leader, Xehanort, did not share his moral compunction and continued their experiments. This eventually led to tragedy and the cre ...

See also:

Organization XIII, Organization XIII - Background, Organization XIII - Members, Organization XIII - 1. Xemnas, Organization XIII - 2. Xigbar, Organization XIII - 3. Xaldin, Organization XIII - 4. Vexen, Organization XIII - 5. Lexaeus, Organization XIII - 6. Zexion, Organization XIII - 7. Saix, Organization XIII - 8. Axel, Organization XIII - 9. Demyx, Organization XIII - 10. Luxord, Organization XIII - 11. Marluxia, Organization XIII - 12. Larxene, Organization XIII - 13. Roxas, Organization XIII - Nobody

Read more here: » Organization XIII: Encyclopedia II - Organization XIII - Background

Organ: Encyclopedia II - DECA Organization - Structure

DECA is divided into five divisions: High School, Collegiate, DEX, Alumni, and Professional. The High School Division is composed of individual chapters (DECA organizations within one school), several of which comprise an Area. Areas are grouped under a state association. State associations are grouped together as regions. Delta Epsilon Chi, is organized in much the same way as High School DECA, except that chapters are by college, not high school. The DEX me ...

See also:

DECA Organization, DECA Organization - History, DECA Organization - Structure, DECA Organization - Sources, DECA Organization - External link

Read more here: » DECA Organization: Encyclopedia II - DECA Organization - Structure

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organ transplant - History

Successful inter-human allotransplants have a relatively long history; the operative skills were present long before the necessities for post-operative survival were discovered. Rejection and the side effects of preventing rejection (especially infection and nephropathy) were, are, and may always be the key problem. Several apocryphal accounts of transplants exist well prior to the scientific understanding and advancements that would be necessary for them to have actually occurred. The Chinese physician Pien Ch-iao reportedly exchange ...

See also:

Organ transplant, Organ transplant - Types of Transplant, Organ transplant - Autograft, Organ transplant - Allograft, Organ transplant - Xenograft, Organ transplant - Major Organs and Tissues Transplanted, Organ transplant - Solid Organs, Organ transplant - Tissues Cells and Fluids, Organ transplant - Types of Donor, Organ transplant - Living, Organ transplant - Deceased formerly cadaveric, Organ transplant - Special Types, Organ transplant - Split Liver Transplants, Organ transplant - Domino Transplants, Organ transplant - History, Organ transplant - Recent Developments, Organ transplant - Steroid-Free Immunosuppression, Organ transplant - Calcineurin-Inhibitor-Free Immunosuppression, Organ transplant - Paired-Donor Exchange, Organ transplant - Notable people having had organ transplants

Read more here: » Organ transplant: Encyclopedia II - Organ transplant - History

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic chemistry - Molecular structure of an organic compound

Compounds are generally made from the building blocks of carbon atoms, hydrogen atoms, and functional groups. The valence of carbon is 4, and hydrogen is 1, functional groups are generally 1. Many, but not all structures can be envisioned by the simple valence rule that there will be one bond for each valence number. Currently, there exist several methods for deducing the structure an organic compound. In general usage are (in alphabetical order): Crystallography: This is the most precise method; however, it is very difficult to ...

See also:

Organic chemistry, Organic chemistry - History, Organic chemistry - Characteristics of organic substances, Organic chemistry - Categories of organic substances, Organic chemistry - Polymers, Organic chemistry - Bio-molecules, Organic chemistry - Molecular structure of an organic compound, Organic chemistry - Organic reactions, Organic chemistry - Reference

Read more here: » Organic chemistry: Encyclopedia II - Organic chemistry - Molecular structure of an organic compound

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Community organizing - History of Community Organizing in the United States

Robert Fisher and Peter Romanofsky have grouped the history of community organizing in the United States into four rough periods: Community organizing - 1880 to 1900. People sought to meet the pressures of rapid immigration and industrialization by organizing immigrant neighborhoods in urban centers. Since the emphasis of the reformers was mostly on building community through settlement houses and other service mechanisms, the dominan ...

See also:

Community organizing, Community organizing - Common Aspects of Organized Communities, Community organizing - History of Community Organizing in the United States, Community organizing - 1880 to 1900, Community organizing - 1900 to 1940, Community organizing - 1940 to 1960, Community organizing - 1960 to Present, Community organizing - Organizations, Community organizing - Notable community organizers

Read more here: » Community organizing: Encyclopedia II - Community organizing - History of Community Organizing in the United States

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - Early history

The immediate predecessor of the electronic organ was the harmonium, or reed organ, an instrument that was very popular in homes and small churches in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In a fashion not totally unlike that of pipe organs, reed organs generated sound by forcing air over a set of reeds by means of a bellows, usually operated by constantly pumping a set of pedals. While reed organs had limited tonal quality, they were small, inexpensive, self-powered, and self-contained. The reed organ was thus able to bring an ...

See also:

Electronic organ, Electronic organ - Early history, Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s, Electronic organ - The spinet organ, Electronic organ - The chord organ, Electronic organ - The console organ, Electronic organ - The modern electronic organ

Read more here: » Electronic organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - Early history

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organ recital - Logistics

Pipe organs are not, in general, portable instruments. The venues for organ recitals using those instruments are thus the churches, threatres, or halls where the organs are housed. However, with some organs the console is portable to a limited extent (such as, for example, being attached to a platform that can be raised or lowered, which is often the case for theatre organs, but rarely the case for church organs). Where this is the case, the console is moved during the recital so that ...

See also:

Organ recital, Organ recital - Logistics, Organ recital - Notable venues and recitals

Read more here: » Organ recital: Encyclopedia II - Organ recital - Logistics

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organ music - Similar instruments

Other instruments which are played from a reservoir of gas and have separate tone-producing mechanisms for each pitch include: the accordion and concertina, in which the bellows is operated by the squeezing action of the instrumentalist; the melodeon, a reed instrument with an air reservior and a foot operated bellows, popular in the USA in the mid-19th century; the Harmonium or parlor organ, a reed instrument usually with many stops and two foot-operated bellows which the instrumentalist operates alternately;< ...

See also:

Organ music, Organ music - Pipe organs, Organ music - Reed organs, Organ music - Electric and electronic organs, Organ music - Electric organs, Organ music - Frequency divider organs, Organ music - Digital organs, Organ music - Similar instruments

Read more here: » Organ music: Encyclopedia II - Organ music - Similar instruments

Organ: Encyclopedia II - Exodus organization - Controversy

Exodus International's first scandal occurred in 1979 when Michael Bussee (one of the co-founding members who had helped organize the 1976 conference that led to Exodus' inception) left the group to be with Gary Cooper, also a co-organizer of that conference and a staff member at the local Exodus ministry where they both worked. Later they held a life commitment ceremony. Their story is one of the focuses of the documentary One Nation Under God (1993), directed by Teodoro Maniaci and Francine Rzeznik. < ...

See also:

Exodus organization, Exodus organization - Controversy, Exodus organization - Paulk Affair, Exodus organization - Exodus today, Exodus organization - Sources

Read more here: » Exodus organization: Encyclopedia II - Exodus organization - Controversy

Organ: Encyclopedia II - DECA Organization - History

Between 1937 and 1946 local clubs of distributive education students were formed to fulfill the need of cooperative education students to belong, to develop socially, and to be a part of a group. In 1944 the state clubs in the area then designated as the Southern Region, announced that they had joined together under the common name of the Distributors' Club. This association was announced at that year' ...

See also:

DECA Organization, DECA Organization - History, DECA Organization - Structure, DECA Organization - Sources, DECA Organization - External link

Read more here: » DECA Organization: Encyclopedia II - DECA Organization - History




Bookmark and Share
Search the Global Oneness web site
Global Oneness is a huge, really huge, web site. Almost whatever you are searching for within health, spirituality, personal development and inspirationals - you will find it here!
Google
 
 

Rate this archive!

Please rate this archive with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.

.



Bookmark and Share

  » Home » » Home »