Word: provee
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This special supplement to TIME is dedicated to the most influential ideas, places, products and people in the luxury business right now. Some may prove to be ephemeral, but great taste?like great tastemakers?endures. I owe personal thanks to the Ferragamo family for educating me on this very topic all those many years...
...near the Suez Canal to Tel Aviv permanently changed fears into hopes and transformed hate into trust. As rumors persist of a reprisal of Syrian-Israeli peace negotiations, it is wise to recall the dramatic effect of Sadat’s visit on a possible Arab-Israel peace. To prove his sincerity about living side by side in peace with Israel, President Bashar Assad of Syria should follow in Sadat’s heroic footsteps and visit Israel without preconditions...
...mortal enemy. Only by addressing the Knesset, by visiting Yad Vashem, and by shaking hands in public with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, can he demonstrate that his talk is not mere lip service. The Israeli people no longer trust Arab leaders at their word; they must prove their credibility and desire for peace through their deeds. By taking the political and personal risk of flying to Jerusalem, Assad will have taken the road less traveled. Going to “the ends of the Earth,” as Sadat did three decades ago, will convince the world that...
...error in meticulously dismantling the Lions. “Two years ago, it was really disheartening,” co-captain Geoff Rathgeber said. “We hung our heads the whole meet, and it was an awful, awful experience. We had a bitter taste and wanted to prove that we were capable of getting the job done, even with the distractions of midterms and Harvard-Yale. Our focus and intensity—everything was spot-on in terms of that.” The Crimson wore black caps for the meet, a move it usually reserves for crucial...
...McCain advisers, in explaining the campaign's Iowa rationale, bounce between the need to prove that their Iowa expenditures are money well spent and the time-honored political tradition of "managing expectations." In one five-minute conversation, campaign manager Rick Davis both boasts that McCain has the "third largest organization in the state" and says, only barely joking, "One thing I've done well as campaign manager is driving expectations in Iowa to the floorboards." Another senior adviser issues a reminder of the campaign's brush with death - "This summer you wouldn't have predicted we'd even be having...