Word: reestablished
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Frankfurt, and to 2.01 Swiss francs in Zurich. One possible reason: speculators noticed that the Washington announcement a) did not promise any particular level of intervention, and b) hinted that the U.S. will not attempt to keep the dollar above any specified floor price-but will merely try to "reestablish order" on the exchanges. That would seem to leave room for a continued, though gradual, decline...
...fear that there is nothing I can ever do to reestablish my reputation as a minister, a public servant, an attorney, and most of all as a husband and father of three children," Ralph said...
...becoming increasingly clear that Vietnam has not been able to reestablish its agricultural production as rapidly as it had hoped to, and that the Vietnamese will experience serious famine this year. Current reports indicate the rice crop will be two million tons smaller than last year's, or 20 per cent short of the normal Vietnamese harvest. It is therefore even more important than ever that the United States government begin at the earliest possible date to pay reparations to the country it spent nearly 20 years destroying, and immediately authorize funds and send foodstuffs to avert the impending famine...
That goal is probably unachievable, Fox says, but he believes that if it is possible to reestablish a community spirit in any large university of the '70s, it is possible at Harvard, imbued as it is with both tradition and talent. Fox says he hopes to establish procedures that will bring all the people concerned with administering undergraduates' lives outside their academic concerns, in touch with each other, using the College dean's office as a meeting ground. "I don't wish to interfere with independent entities," Fox says, "but I do want them to be structurally part...
...audience probably expected the blather that educators prefer to hide behind, Rosovsky instead proceeded to announce a move that stands today as one of the most prominent decisions of his two - and - one - half-year tenure: "I think that Harvard College needs a new Redbook. It is time to reestablish a consensus that will last another 20 years." The comment by the Japanese - economics - professor - turned - dean, stated in a level, dispassionate voice, meant little or nothing to students gathered in the lofty dining hall. But it set off a wholesale review of undergraduate education that is just...