Word: furnished
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...complete the testimony against himself, and to every effectual purpose accuse himself as entirely as he would by stating every circumstance which would be required for his conviction ... It is the province of the court to judge whether any direct answer to the question which may be proposed will furnish evidence against the witness...
...simply had said, "We believe you." Almost as fascinating was the spectacle of Eisenhower breaking through the cold mechanics of diplomacy to speak directly to an old friend of the opposite camp. Cried Geneva's La Suisse: "Eisenhower's remarks to the Soviet marshals do not furnish the slightest basis for a treaty. But they have greater value than any parchment. They do not constitute a political commitment by the U.S. toward anyone, but a moral engagement to the universe...
...Lawn, one school is so crowded that it has even considered a triple shift, with first-graders coming from. 5 to 9 in the evening. Though Northbrook has managed to build one new ten-room school, it does not have enough money left over to equip or furnish it. Last year Palatine found itself in an even more embarrassing position: without enough money to pay its teachers, it had to resort to a sort of scrip that had not been used since the great Depression...
...Kentucky. He had dug the well, built the nonsectarian church, opened the one-room schoolhouse in 1855. But now, he wrote later in the American Missionary, "we need a college here . . . an antislavery, anti-caste, anti-rum, antitobacco, anti-sectarian, pious school under Christian influence, a school that will furnish the best possible facilities for those with small means." Last week, as Berea College celebrated its 100th anniversary, it was everything that its founder could have hoped for. "We need working men," Preacher Fee had said. "The rich, the proud and the indolent will not come to such a school...
...Committee Chairman Clarence Cannon and a group of TVA advocates, was a Democratic fiasco. President Eisenhower had asked for $6,500,000 to tie in TVA's transmission lines with a Dixon-Yates line at the middle of the Mississippi River, so that the privately owned company could furnish the Tennessee Valley and the Atomic Energy Commission with needed reserves of electrical energy. Cannon & Co. sluiced off the $6,500,000 from Dixon-Yates and authorized it as a down payment on the Fulton TVA plant...