Word: clearest
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...tide of opposition, President Bush has come out swinging. In a televised address to the nation on Sunday night—the first speech that the President has given from the Oval Office since the war in Iraq began in 2003—Bush made what is perhaps the clearest and most honest case for the war that anyone in his administration has yet presented. He rightly touted the success of the recent elections and other accomplishments of the reconstruction effort. He reminded Americans that regardless of one’s position on the war itself, immediate withdrawal from Iraq...
Risk management is the clearest benefit of doing good. Nike knows something about that. The Oregon-based sneaker giant spent the 1990s batting away criticism for its dependence on foreign sweatshop labor. It became clear that the company was in trouble when Amnesty International postcards protesting the practice began arriving at Nike headquarters in the early 1990s. The campaign evolved into boycotts. Colleges dropped the brand from their athletic wear, and Nike spokesman Michael Jordan was put in the awkward position of calling on his sponsor to "do the right thing...
...think it’s most likely that Justice Breyer would raise the statutory argument in the justices’ conference,” Yale law professor Robert A. Burt wrote in an e-mail. “Breyer took the clearest initiative in raising it with the solicitor general...
...including Fuerza Latina, the Harvard College Democrats, the Executive Board of the South Asian Association, and the Society of Arab Students. After interviewing all the candidates, “it was pretty clear that John Haddock and Annie Riley not only were the most qualified, but also had the clearest vision of what they wanted to do once they became president and vice president,” says Eric P. Lesser ’07, president of the Harvard College Democrats.BLENDING EXPERIENCEHaddock and Riley say that one of their ticket’s biggest strengths is their diversity of experience.Haddock...
...soar. "I won't lean out of the window and shout that this will wreck the recovery," says Stefan Schneider at Deutsche Bank Research in Frankfurt. If he's right - and if Trichet is telling the truth about a limited increase - then the ECB decision may be the clearest sign yet that Europe's long-awaited upturn has arrived...