Word: forbidding
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Museum, prompted he implies by his "hostility to almost anything that smacked of Jews," caused him to prohibit the curator of the Museum in 1926 from raising any funds for the museum at all. I think Lowell's anti-Semitism is well documented. But in fact he did not forbid the curator from raising funds in 1926. Rather, he crossed out certain names on a list of names submitted by the curator for approach for gifts. This is an old practice of the University--clearing and assigning approaches to donors...
...staff member in Dallas with ample vote-counting skills as former executive director of the New Hampshire State Democratic Party, estimates that "we can be 4% or 5% of the vote in a given district or state." Although the group has applied for a tax-exempt status that would forbid blatant politicking, it may publicize the extent to which a given politician's platform conforms to its beliefs. Realistically, UWSA has a decent chance of tipping elections in between two and three dozen districts. Says Henson, the Texas volunteer: "We are not a very old organization. ((But)) we will...
...possess them under most circumstances. Wisconsin Democrat Herb Kohl, the sponsor of the measure, had the best argument for the ban: "A gunshot is the leading cause of death for both black and white teenage boys in America." Later that night, the Senate voted 51 to 49 to forbid the manufacture, sale and future possession of 19 models of semiautomatic assault weapons and their copycats, including the AK-47 and the Intratec TEC-9, favorites of gang bangers everywhere...
Water agencies want the revised Safe Water Act to make the EPA take such calculations into account when imposing rules, and to forbid the U.S. government to issue standards without supplying the money it takes to meet them -- a position the National Governors' Association has seconded. A 1991 study showed that the cost of meeting environmental mandates will eat up more than 23% of the budget of Columbus, Ohio, by the year 2000 -- and that assumes no new regulations between now and then. In many cities, the costs of environmental laws will soon exceed those of police and fire protection...
...might surprise you to hear that I don't exactly associate myself with such a stereotype either. So, what was the lure of the magazine, then? I mean, heaven forbid that any liberal would voluntarily work on such a publication. In a word: experience. Editing a nationally distributed publication was certainly a step up from editing a high school yearbook. Not many people can say that they have helped produce a marketed magazine from scratch...