Word: fore
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Rather, representatives should have the question in the fore of their minds that they’re constantly judging subconsciously: how much the campus needs a particular project. Anyone who’s observed the Council undergo its reforms over the past years should realize that its representatives, while chummy, hardly treat their jobs with levity—even the decisions that repulse me, like withholding money from Christian clubs that require their officers to be Christian, reveal the seriousness of the organization. These are people who are able to realize on their own that there?...
That’s also where Allen has brought his own expertise to bear. During his tenure as executive chef, he has brought food safety technology to the fore...
Without Higgins (41 points last year), a trio of sophomore forwards—Joe Zappala (see ON HOCKEY), Christian Jensen, and Jeff Hristovoski—have stepped to the fore, combining for 52 points in league play...
Mancusi-Ungaro says a new art museum would also mean a home for her Center for the Technical Study of Modern Art. This center, established when she was hired, is concerned with exactly the issues that Rothko’s murals have brought to the fore...
...that the dust has settled on the trade talks between rich and poor nations in Cancun this September, the domestic “trade meltdown”—the collapse of the Clinton-era consensus on free trade—has returned glaringly to the fore. A New York Times columnist recently pointed out that most of the Democratic hopefuls have shifted toward Dick Gephardt’s protectionist stance. Dennis Kucinich is calling for the outright repeal of NAFTA. And Joe Lieberman is stuck in the lonely role of defending Clinton’s laissez faire trade...