Word: jointing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...temporary. The same fax indicated that other conditions would be forthcoming. And after the fax was sent, as the lawyers were retiring to a Little Havana restaurant that evening, confident that they had backed Reno down again, Marisleysis told them to make sure she would have some measure of "joint custody" during the appeals process...
...press or public, Starr at one point came within hours of possibly losing his job--and being declared in contempt of court--because he refused to obey a secret court order to answer questions by Clinton's lawyers about grand jury leaks. Meanwhile, those lawyers had entered into "joint defense agreements" with grand jury witnesses whose attorneys had been recommended by the White House. This sharing of information gave Clinton's defenders a direct window into the supposedly secret grand jury proceedings. Most damaging for Starr was that, as the probe dragged on, the public grew impatient with the prosecutor...
...their joint editorial announcing the findings of PAGE, the heads of the World Bank, the U.N. Development Program, the U.N. Environment Program and the World Resources Institute confirm their "commitment to making the viability of the world's ecosystems a critical development priority for the 21st century." These are sweeping words, but the jury on this commitment will be composed of the world's ecosystems. The planet itself will let us know, in the harshest possible manner, if our words are not being backed by action...
...joint concentrator in social studies and religion, recently completed her senior thesis on the role of the church in Asian American communities...
Commercial women's magazines are famous for defeating efforts to alter their standard formula, but none have ever encountered an editorial director who is also the host of an enormously popular women's magazine-on-the-air. O, a joint venture of Oprah's Harpo Entertainment Group and Hearst Magazines (which is printing 1 million copies of the first issue), is produced in New York City by a staff headed by editor in chief Ellen Kunes. A small, quiet, blond woman rendered even paler by the fluorescent bulbs of her office, Kunes was explaining the magazine last week with...