Word: usher
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that’s not the point.) Like me, Elizabeth F. Maher generally prefers the relative anonymity of a signature at the bottom of an editors’ note to the self-aggrandizement writ large we’re featuring in this issue. But we’ll usher her center stage for the moment, just as we’re taking this curtain call...
Members of the Crimson Key Society are proud ambassadors of the University, serving at its most important functions. We direct Freshman Week, give tours, help out during events like Arts First and Parents’ Weekends, and usher at Commencement. Like most other extracurricular clubs here on campus, we also enjoy throwing parties for our members and support active social opportunities for all students. I agree wholeheartedly with Jenelle’s pledge to combat irresponsible partying. However, Jennelle fails to recognize that this is something the Crimson Key Society already does...
...whether the specialist is in the office, in the car or at home. Smaller companies like Sylantro, based in Campbell, Calif., offer to phone companies similar products that they house in their networks and that the phone companies can in turn offer to their customers. "We're helping to usher in a whole new era of usability in communications that people haven't been able to get to in the past," says Laura Thompson, vice president of corporate marketing at Sylantro...
...before, TIME photographer Chris Usher was in Waco with members of the White House staff. "They said: 'the president is going to Baghdad in two hours,'" Usher said. "We all thought it was a joke." They were forbidden to tell anyone. "Not even my wife knows where I am," said Fox News soundman John Wallace, who had been bundled into a car by White House officials and driven with about 10 other journalists to the airfield. "Everyone thinks we're with Bush in Waco...
According to Witney, there has been talk of adding 10 new KIPP schools per year. Expecting the program to usher in a revolution in our public schools may be overly optimistic. But at the very least, it is, as Newsweek magazine has put it, “a national model for more widespread reform of charter-school programs.” Despite their flaws, charter schools have proven to be the last best hope for inner-city education...