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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 327
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carry and out
Early in November the clouds lifted enough to carry out the assigned missions.
The amount which may be borrowed from the SBA depends on how much is required to carry out the intended purpose of the loan.
There are authorized to be appropriated such sums, to remain available until expended, as may be necessary, but not more than $75,000,000 in all, ( A ) to carry out the provisions of this Act during the fiscal years 1962 to 1967, inclusive ; ;
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, such sums as may be necessary to enable the Commission to carry out its functions under this Title.
A naval blockade would be thoroughly in line with the Monroe Doctrine, would be a relatively simple operation to carry out, and would bring an abrupt end to Soviet penetration of our hemisphere ''.
Throughout these years, the statutory authorization was for such sums as were necessary to carry out the provisions of the Act.
If it is decided to make a small shift which may be required from military aid or special assistance funds, in order to carry out the purposes of the Mutual Security Act through this new peaceful program, this will be a hopeful sign to the world.
They will help provide the skilled manpower necessary to carry out the development projects planned by the host governments, acting at a working level and serving at great personal sacrifice.
The Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. at Carleton are connected with the corresponding national organizations and carry out their general purposes.
Of startling significance, too, is the assertion that it was possible to carry out this program with only a 6 percent attrition rate as compared with a rate of 59 percent reported for a comparable group of families who were receiving help in traditionally operated child guidance services.
Other provisions of the Act empower the Secretary to adopt regulations necessary to carry out its provisions, and he has done so.
If you want to raise feed or carry out some enterprise on a larger scale, you'll need more land.
Each ally will have to carry out obligations long since laid down, but never completely fulfilled.
`` It is not necessary that a defendant actually have conpired to use the U.S. mails to defraud as long as there is evidence of a conspiracy, and the mails were then used to carry it out ''.
Beyond that, Allied disagreement about military intervention in Laos -- despite warnings that they might do so -- allowed Moscow to carry out with impunity a series of military and diplomatic moves that greatly strengthened the pro-Communist forces.
Meanwhile, all the personnel except those few needed to carry out the performance of the ship, went into the suspensor.
And, in the half-year left before reaching their destination, the men would carry out whatever preparations were needed.
Another candidate for one of the first scholars to carry out comparative ethnographic-type studies in person was the medieval Persian scholar Abū Rayhān Bīrūnī in the eleventh century, who wrote about the peoples, customs, and religions of the Indian subcontinent.
Orestes and Pylades carry out the revenge, and consequently Orestes is pursued by the Erinyes ( Furies, female personifications of vengeance ).
Since 1998, Angola has successfully worked with the United Nations Security Council to impose and carry out sanctions on UNITA.
Many computer programs contain algorithms that detail the specific instructions a computer should perform ( in a specific order ) to carry out a specified task, such as calculating employees ' paychecks or printing students ' report cards.
This is a negative Romberg's test, or more accurately, it denotes the individual's inability to carry out the test, because the individual feels unstable even with open eyes.

carry and exalted
The village mullah was the natural arbiter in matters of marriage, divorce, and inheritance ; and the exalted jurisconsult, in order to carry out the very function for which he was exalted, gave opinions on those matters of law on which he was consulted.

carry and conception
They never did, and never can, carry us beyond our own person, and it is by the imagination only that we can form any conception of what are his sensations.
At the conception of the project, one of the planned rides was to be a giant ape that would carry riders up and down on one of the tower's columns.
But then reason itself depends on conception, and this again on sensation ; and we have no means of judging whether our sensations are true or false, whether they correspond to the objects that produce them, or carry wrong impressions to the mind, producing false conceptions and ideas, and leading reason also into error.
This is not a lesson you can squeeze onto a tombstone, or, for that matter, our current conception of a curriculum, but it is one to carry through this life.

carry and author
The Christian Byzantine author Eutychius claimed that the Jews of Nazareth helped the Persians carry out their slaughter of the Christians.
The next book to carry Charteris ’ s name, 1964's Vendetta for the Saint, was written by science fiction author Harry Harrison, who had worked on the Saint comic strip, after which Charteris edited and revised the manuscript.
On the other hand, the very chamber in the temple where the Genji was written is shown — with the ink-slab which the author used, and a Buddhist Sutra in her handwriting, which, if they do not satisfy the critic, still are sufficient to carry conviction to the minds of ordinary visitors to the temple.
According to author Jeffrey Toobin, later analysis showed that a total of 18 counties — accounting for a quarter of all votes cast in Florida — did not carry out the legally mandated machine recount, but " o one from the Gore campaign ever challenged " the notion that the machine recount had been completed.
It does not necessarily mean that there is a strong bond among the members, although Howard Rheingold, author of the book of the same name, mentions that virtual communities form " when people carry on public discussions long enough, with sufficient human feeling, to form webs of personal relationships ".
" He did, however, caution readers that " the author is not a historian or someone practiced in writing on politics, and she tends to let her passions carry her away.
Azar Nafisi, a notable Iranian academic and author, has referred to her influence, saying that " the first woman to unveil and to question both political and religious orthodoxy was a woman named Táhirih who lived in early 1800s ... And we carry this tradition.
For instance, the eminent Yoruba author James Johnson wrote in one of the most detailed early descriptions of Ifa that " Whenever this should be the case, a woman would receive from a Babalawo only one Ikin or Consecrated Palm nut called Eko, which she would carry about her body for her protection, and whenever divination should recommend and prescribe to her sacrifice to Ifa, she would, for the time being, hand over her Eko either to her husband or to her brother, or any other male relative according to prescription, who would include it in his own Ikins for the purpose of the worship and sacrifice in which she would participate.
The author responded Religion and art have collided for centuries, and will carry on doing battle long after my play and I are forgotten.
Over the years, four other schools now carry the name of the famous Swedish author in Stockholm.
In a March 21, 2008 article in the San Francisco Chronicle, the author, David Perlman speaks of " the danger to lifelines – the roads, rail tracks and bridges that must carry ambulances, fire trucks and fleeing cars after the quake ; the airports that are bound to be unusable ".
The author once said in an interview that, "... we Europeans are so divided amongst ourselves, but we have so much in common -- a common history and a heavy past that we carry, and at some point you feel we look back more than we look forwards.
In one of the late episodes of the series, aired in 2003 on The History Channel, French prisoner Christian David named Sarti as one of three French criminals hired to carry out the assassination of Kennedy on November 22, 1963, when he was interviewed by author Anthony Summers.
If a writer consistently avoids reporting, e. g., the weaknesses of the Twelve, even when there are earlier sources that provide lurid details of their follies, one could draw the conclusion that the later editor / author held the Twelve in higher esteem, either because of the editor's presuppositions, or because the editor was perhaps trying to reinforce the legitimacy of those chosen by Jesus to carry on his work.

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