Word: furnisher
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...would take ten years to establish a company based on one style," he says. "Once I got the school going, the rest was inevitable, just like a chemical reaction." He decided the style should reflect the elegance of the European court ballet tradition, and that the man to furnish it was famed Russian Choreographer George Balanchine. Kirstein induced him to leave Europe (where he had been Diaghilev's chief choreographer) and take over both the school and the performing companies...
...often been upheld by the Supreme Court as part of our national Bill of Rights, and the same rule has been generally adopted in state constitutions. Article XII of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, part of the Commonwealth Constitution, provides, "No subject shall...be compelled to accuse or furnish evidence against himself...
...wife and charged with being $400,000 behind in support payments. She wanted a settlement before he left the country. "I'm going to ... Paris this afternoon," pleaded Patińo. "No, you're not," snapped the judge. "You're going to city prison unless you furnish bond." By evening Patino was free to leave for Paris. He had raised the $250,000 bond, high enough, said the judge, to assure a return engagement with the court and his wife's budget worries...
These figures furnish sufficient proof that the Davidson formula--a liberal arts curriculum coupled with a highly restricted campus life--succeeds in producing the type of man that the founders of the college desired, a man who will bring a disciplined mind and body to bear on the many problems facing an expanding South.The Chambers building (above) is the focal point of Davidson life. Administrative offices, a large auditorium, and various classrooms and laboratories are contained in the structure, built...
...plain and simple duty as doctors to furnish leadership in every national, state and community effort to look into ways of improving health conditions in America. If we abdicate this responsibility . . . then other elements in our society will take over and we will find ourselves under a distasteful system of medical care. If organized medicine is to retain its rightful place of esteem in our society, it had better cease and desist at once from its current policy of proclaiming that it alone can decide whether there are any health problems in this country, and that it alone can decide...