Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Potter Stewart" ¶ 11
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

was and lone
The hands and their bosses saw him as a lone knight of the range, waging a dedicated crusade against a lawless new society that was threatening a beloved way of life.
A lone pro-Hearst voice from New York City was that of William Devery, who had been expelled as a Tammany leader but still claimed strong influence in his own district.
Magnum Rim-Fire rifles, 1961's lone newcomer was the Kodiak Model 260 autoloader ( around $60 ).
In the street, walking as quickly as he could, Stanley Gilborn was a lone figure.
Anne said it wasn't surprising because Charles was antisocial, a lone wolf, and completely one-sided.
The tempo of their arrangement was slowed to allow for the bagpipes, but it was based on Collins ': it began with a bagpipe solo introduction similar to her lone voice, then it was accompanied by the band of bagpipes and horns, whereas in her version she is backed up by a chorus.
Liaquat Ali Khan, the first Prime Minister of Pakistan, was assassinated by Saad Akbar, a lone assassin, in 1951.
; AIM-54C: The lone improved model that was ever produced.
After a few Marshall expletives, Murchison gave the rights to " Hail to the Redskins " to Marshall for his vote, the lone one against Murchison getting a franchise at that time, and a rivalry was born.
The blue " lone star " logo was retained, but with a white border setting it off from the silverblue.
Dallas's lone victory in a conference championship or Super Bowl wearing the blue jerseys was in the 1978 NFC Championship game against the Los Angeles Rams.
Subsequently, in " Dalek " ( 2005 ), it is revealed that the last great Time War was fought between the Time Lords and the Daleks, ending in the obliteration of both sides and with only two apparent survivors ; the Doctor and a lone Dalek that had somehow fallen through time and crashed on Earth.
The logo was an abstract depiction of a bull's head, split in such a way to resemble the flag of Texas, including a lone star to stand for the eye, the five points of which representing pride, courage, strength, tradition and independence.
Preceding Livermore, future statesman Bernard M. Baruch also operated such pools before removing his investors and was later known as the " lone wolf on Wall Street ", as he managed his own fortune.
Lithium has a low ionization energy and readily gives up its lone valence electron to the fluorine atom, which has a positive electron affinity and accepts the electron that was donated by the lithium atom.
In particular, he was regarded in the Romantic era as embodying the lone genius whose efforts to improve human existence could also result in tragedy: Mary Shelley, for instance, gave The Modern Prometheus as the subtitle to her novel Frankenstein ( 1818 ).
He was no longer able to shoulder the awesome responsibility of being the Earth's lone protector from Lunar-launched H-Bomb attacks.
Winfield was the lone bright spot, leading the National League with 118 RBIs.
The first half of Super Bowl IX was a defensive struggle, with the lone score being the first safety in Super Bowl history when Tarkenton was downed in his own end zone.
There is speculation that anthrax mailed inside letters to U. S. politicians was the work of a lone wolf terrorist.
Their agreed to formula was, “ Done in Convention, by the unanimous consent of the States present .” George Washington noted in his diary that night, the proposal was agreed to by eleven state delegations and the lone Mr. Hamilton for New York.

was and dissenter
Ann Catt was a lonely, devoted soul, never married, conducting a spotless home and devoted to her church, but a perpetual dissenter and born critic.
Watts ( 1674 – 1748 ), whose father was an Elder of a dissenter congregation, complained at age 16, that when allowed only psalms to sing, the faithful could not even sing about their Lord, Christ Jesus.
Later served on the U. S. Supreme Court and is notable for being the lone dissenter in the Plessy v. Ferguson and the Civil Rights Cases, which upheld the constitutionality of state laws requiring racial segregation in public facilities under the doctrine of " separate but equal " and held that the Civil Rights Act of 1875 was unconstitutional, respectively.
The first jury vote was 11 to 1 in favor of acquittal, with Upedgraff being the lone dissenter.
So, while his Jacksonian commitment to states ' rights and limited government made him a dissenter during the Civil War, what Mach calls Pendleton's Jacksonian " ardor to expand opportunities for ordinary Americans " was the basis for his leadership in civil service reform and his controversial plan to use greenbacks to repay federal debt.
While a dissenter from its official Church was only faced with fines and imprisonment in Protestant England, six people were executed for heresy or blasphemy during the reign of Elizabeth I, and two more in 1612 under James I.
Reason, in Glanvill's view, was incompatible with being a dissenter.
His father, John was an Anglican, his mother, Susannah a dissenter.
Spencer's father was a religious dissenter who drifted from Methodism to Quakerism, and who seems to have transmitted to his son an opposition to all forms of authority.
An advocate of judicial restraint, Minton was a regular supporter of the majority opinions during his early years on the Court ; he became a regular dissenter after President Dwight Eisenhower's appointees altered the Bench's composition.
* Anne Hutchinson, mentioned in Chapter 1, The Prison Door, was a religious dissenter ( 1591 – 1643 ).
When the fight was over, Gonzalez got the verdict on a 12-round split decision ; the judge from Germany was the lone dissenter.
" The lone dissenter was Justice Roberts, who had written the majority opinion nine years earlier in Grovey.
A notable dissenter was Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa, imprisoned for a number of years and expelled from Romania in June 1985 after signing an open letter criticizing and demanding an end to the regime's violations of human rights.
The third dissenter agreed, but added that, in his opinion, there was insufficient evidence to sustain a guilty verdict, so the indictment should be dismissed altogether ( failure of proof means no retrial ).
A leading landowning family of the area was the Clan Munro who provided many leading political and religious figures to the town, including the dissenter Rev John Munro of Tain ( died ca.
* Rev John Munro of Tain, the 17th century religious dissenter was a minister here.
Rehnquist himself was a dissenter in the Raich case.
Justice John Marshall Harlan, who was the lone dissenter in Plessy v. Ferguson, wrote the majority for the court.
Like other subjects of Elizabethan history plays, Sir John Oldcastle was an actual person, a soldier and Lollard dissenter who was hanged and burned for heresy and treason in 1417 — thus earning himself a place in the seminal text of the Protestant Reformation in Tudor England, John Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
Some of Standard Oil's critics, including the lone dissenter Justice John Marshall Harlan, argued that Standard Oil and its Rule of Reason was a departure from previous Sherman Act case law, which purportedly had interpreted the language of the Sherman Act to hold that all contracts restraining trade were prohibited, regardless of whether the restraint actually produced ill effects.
His father was described as a " non conformist dissenter " and his mother was a Quaker – their marriage in an Anglican church resulted in them being disowned by the Society of Friends.

0.230 seconds.