Word: forayed
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Gray's latest foray into the for-profit world is his new Mars & Venus Counseling Centers, in which therapists pay $2,500 for training in the Mars & Venus "technique," an initial licensing fee of $1,900 for the right to hang out a shingle (and use the logo) as a Mars & Venus counselor, and then a $300-a-month "royalty" payment. Gray says he has acquired his special love insights after years of counseling couples and hearing anecdotes from his fans at book signings and lectures. But he is not a licensed anything other than driver, to which some mental...
...senior in college applying to law schools, foremost in my mind was the knowledge that I was about to embark on a journey that could best be described as a foray into the bottomless pit of hell...
...Ghungroo obviously took great care in selecting tidbits from the rich diversity of South Asian cultures to present to their viewers, and the performers gave their all in presenting the beauty and vitality of their art to the greatest possible advantage. The show was an brilliant and exuberant a foray into the varied wealth of an ancient culture's living treasures as anyone could hope to cram into three hours. I only wish that Ghungroo were running another week, so that I could recommend that you all go and see it. Unfortunately, it was a limited engagement; all that...
Born in Spain and raised in Mexico, Domingo is conservative and internationalist in his outlook, and his agenda for the Washington Opera reflects his more conventional programming taste. In addition to the standard Italian and French fare the company has traditionally presented, he plans a foray into the German repertoire with new productions of Richard Strauss's operas as well as Wagner's Ring cycle, the calling card of major opera companies worldwide. "We chose him because he is a consummate musician," says Patricia L. Mossel, the company's executive director. "He knows voices. He is a very fine pianist...
Virtually every big paper has made a foray into the online world. "The name of our business is how many eyeballs look at our content," says Howard Tyner, editor of the Chicago Tribune. "If you look just at ink on paper, the number of eyeballs is going down. But to all the people thumping their breast about the end of the daily newspaper, I say, 'Phooey.'" He whips out plans for a $7 million renovation of the Tribune building that will bring the company's print, Internet and cable operations into close contact with one another. Nine companies, including Hearst...