The people who were at the fore of this were people who were at the fore in the culture.
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Our fore-fore-foremothers probably weren't wearing theirs with oversized sunglasses and wool jumpsuits, but we like these fuzzy extras for much the same reason they do: They're crazy warm.
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" But Donald Trump is more likely to say "Fore!
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The Moon enters Capricorn, bringing intimacy issues to the fore.
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The election of Reagan really brought conservatism to the fore.
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Issues concerning sex and intimacy will come to the fore.
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As such, more independent voices have come to the fore.
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Related: Artist Transforms Patterned Psychedelic GIFs Into Holographic Prints Fore!
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In fact, they're at the fore of his artistic endeavor.
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Two fundamental issues were at the fore during this period.
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The Moon enters Gemini tonight, bringing relationships to the fore.
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Issues with your siblings could also come to the fore.
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On "Roc," the Emersons' blackness was put at the fore.
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Issues of depth and intimacy may come to the fore.
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Onstage, female theatermakers are bringing women's stories to the fore.
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Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore.
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The bar at the Tintagel Hotel, Fore Street, Tintagel, Cornwall.
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Each new decade has brought past sins to the fore.
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But it could quickly come roaring back to the fore.
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More allegations from Bloomberg's past have come to the fore.
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The earlier, more radical work came back to the fore.
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Fore operates 15 outlets in Jakarta, which range from "grab and go" kiosks for workers in a hurry, to shops with space to sit and delivery-only locations, Fore co-founder Elisa Suteja told TechCrunch.
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Conversations about money and self-worth will come to the fore.
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Fish's notched and shaped drawings brought those imperfections to the fore.
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Debts, taxes, and other complicated financial issues come to the fore.
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Scorpio season is here, bringing issues around money to the fore.
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Your sex life is a theme that's coming to the fore.
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Cuban relations often come to the fore during U.S. election campaigns.
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New concepts like depression, anger and resignation come to the fore.
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The bench doesn't slide fore and aft, but the backs recline.
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Holy Sons is very vocal heavy, with lyrics at the fore.
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As traditional media erodes, new media is coming to the fore.
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That suggests that an Asian benchmark will rise to the fore.
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The Moon enters Taurus, too, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
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Issues concerning sex, death, and taxes will come to the fore.
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But Donald Trump's campaign and election have them to the fore.
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When the threat recedes, our internal conflicts come to the fore.
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Only now has the politics of class returned to the fore.
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Issues around sex, trust, and intimacy also come to the fore.
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Expect sex, intimacy, and trust issues to come to the fore.
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Issues around sex, trust, and shared resources come to the fore.
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That conflict came to the fore during the 2017 holiday season.
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Her unresolved grief was coming to the fore in the clinic.
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Race and racism have come to the fore in some elections.
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Traveling, again, is another theme that will come to the fore.
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Mr. Trump's election has again brought the issue to the fore.
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The bourbon barrel-effect slides to the fore in the aftertaste.
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But ethical questions have now "come to the fore," she said.
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Mr Farron's evangelical beliefs came to the fore during the election campaign.
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Murphy has come to the fore on the issue of gun control.
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Relationship issues will come to the fore now that it's Scorpio season.
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"It should have been brought to the fore …long ago," Trump said.
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Wade, the courts and the rights of women come to the fore?
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Issues concerning home and family are going to come to the fore.
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"This needs to be a fore-thought, not an afterthought," he said.
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|
The alt-right came to the fore during the U.S. presidential election.
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Marville's shots are devoid of people, bringing the fixtures to the fore.
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The national security implications of virtual currencies have come to the fore.
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This has brought an unlikely defender of globalization to the fore — China.
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|
The Moon is in Gemini today, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
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|
Wade in 1973 — brought these antithetical beliefs about abortion to the fore.
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Instead, what's inside the pulse — resonance, fluid, potential — comes to the fore.
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This election brings to the fore a choice for all of us.
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"We've heard and read reports of children freezing to death," Fore said.
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"La economía se suspende por un bloqueo en la red", dijo Fore.
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"Due to a network shutdown, the economy shuts down," said Mr. Fore.
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|
The ease of genetic testing has brought this question to the fore.
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|
"These cases haven't happened overnight," said Henrietta H. Fore, UNICEF's executive director.
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|
Henrietta Fore is executive director of UNICEF, the United Nations children's agency.
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|
And this mass murder is bringing these political questions to the fore?
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It was full of ideas that are now coming into fore now.
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Issues concerning your home and family will come to the fore today.
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Divisions that were previously papered over are now coming to the fore.
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Also, being a Bang & Olufsen product, beauty and luxury are at the fore.
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Complicated financial issues like taxes, debts, or inheritances will come to the fore.
|
|
The Moon is in Capricorn today, bringing issues concerning money to the fore.
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|
The Moon enters fiery Aries today, bringing issues concerning relationships to the fore.
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All that background pain has pushed itself to the fore of my psyche.
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|
In aggregate, they tell stories that bring the subjects' humanity to the fore.
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|
The Moon enters Taurus early today, bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
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|
The alt-right movement came to the fore during the U.S. presidential election.
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The lead changed hands three more times before Jones came to the fore.
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|
But this year has seen a number of worries come to the fore.
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The shocking defeat brought the Islamic militant group's military prowess to the fore.
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|
She is that three-year-old—until another identity comes to the fore.
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Of course, reality comes to the fore when they discover they're losing money.
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|
The midrow slides fore and aft, so legroom is what you make it.
|
|
Healthier drinks will come to the fore, according to Kantar executive Graham Staplehurst.
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|
Because it brought to the fore discussions about the purpose of public education?
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|
Mass murder in a gay nightclub has brought the debate to the fore.
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|
It's stronger that way, because different voices bring different arguments to the fore.
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|
Still, strategic voting has since come to the fore in the G.O.P. race.
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|
A recent report from the Stimson Center brings that question to the fore.
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|
This full moon will bring issues concerning sex and intimacy to the fore.
|
|
This evening, a power struggle in a relationship will come to the fore.
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|
Issues concerning cash and your sense of self-worth come to the fore.
|
|
" The anxiety around productivity comes to the fore most clearly in "The Problem.
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|
The Moon will in Aquarius all day, bringing intimacy issues to the fore.
|
|
"In hindsight, that should have come to the fore" in the post-Sept.
|
|
It also brings Nick's fashionista cousin Astrid (Gemma Chan) more to the fore.
|
|
While each country will have priorities, three issues have come to the fore.
|
|
But in recent years amateurs have emerged at the fore via new channels.
|
|
The sound world of space is predictable, with a vibraphone at the fore.
|
|
There's a full schedule of congressional testimony today, with Russia to the fore.
|
|
At times, it seems dormant; at times, it comes heatedly to the fore.
|
|
As Mr. Slonim grappled with this, his health issue came to the fore.
|
|
He writes: Corporations bring to the fore questions of size, power and accountability.
|
|
The actor's life also comes to the fore in two other distinctive films.
|
|
Then the fundamentals come back to the fore: How far does inflation go?
|
|
The suspension of Judge Pawel Juszczyszyn brought the issue back to the fore.
|
|
This all comes to the fore at a sensitive time in a sensitive place.
|
|
The Moon enters Earth sign Capricorn tonight, bringing issues concerning money to the fore.
|
|
"The party's extreme right wing views ... are coming increasingly to the fore," Peter said.
|
|
In His Own Voice, Buckley's humanity, humility and humor are always at the fore.
|
|
This brings to the fore a tension at the centre of Ms Warren's capitalism.
|
|
It's an issue that has come to the fore in recent days because Sen.
|
|
Sometimes, the worst parts of me were brought to the fore by this love.
|
|
But one thing is fore sure: They're fiercely proud — and protective — of their Angels.
|
|
As they hold fast, the family talks and generational differences come to the fore.
|
|
Yet in Mr Shulkin's case, the flap has pushed another scandal to the fore.
|
|
To the fore was stopping North Korea's nuclear weapons and missile program, he said.
|
|
These challenges are to the fore as Germany struggles to form a new government.
|
|
They will come to the fore only because Republicans nominated him to the presidency.
|
|
Yet it was the event's focus on representation and inclusion that took the fore.
|
|
Toss them in the trash, while you yell "Fore!" and everything should be fine.
|
|
Does that new dynamic come to fore in the coming days to complicate things?
|
|
Popular influences come to the fore: vaudeville tunes, circus marches, cabaret, Iberian dances, ragtime.
|
|
Truth will not come to the fore without hard work and, potentially, a fight.
|
|
But in the final stretch, those divisions have come have come to the fore.
|
|
But with nationalist advisers at the fore, populist schemes will likely prevail, economists said.
|
|
Watchmen has come back to the cultural fore today through two different sequel works.
|
|
Then the ape repeats evolution and prosperity, then humanity comes to the fore again.
|
|
The Moon enters Libra tonight, bringing issues around sex and intimacy to the fore.
|
|
Founded in 1864, the agency has helped bring many brands to the cultural fore.
|
|
" "This story is different because it brings all the other issues to the fore.
|
|
Relationship issues will also come to the fore due to the Moon entering Cancer.
|
|
Swing through the videos to see the stars sportin' their best fairway form. Fore!
|
|
Hundreds of creative applications of 3D visualization and augmentation are coming to the fore.
|
|
But one partial solution has surged to the fore: sending money directly to Americans.
|
|
Like any election, the campaign process brings many tensions in town to the fore.
|
|
This week's harrowing episode, "The Last Ceremony," moves Gilbert's question back to the fore.
|
|
But they don't slide fore and aft to maximize either leg or cargo room.
|
|
Harshly divisive cultural issues came to the fore, driving even deeper wedges between Americans.
|
|
These are issues that certainly came to the fore in the last few years.
|
|
For passengers in the rear, seating slides fore and aft for extra leg room.
|
|
Mr. Goines steps to the fore here with a three-night run at Dizzy's.
|
|
Intimate issues come to the fore, and yes: Do watch out for manipulative behavior.
|
|
FOIX, France — When one French rider starts to fade, another comes to the fore.
|
|
FOIX, France — When one French rider starts to fade, another comes to the fore.
|
|
Mr. Schnatter notwithstanding, there's a considerable upside in bringing the founder to the fore.
|
|
But the two have combined to bring fears of anti-Semitism to the fore.
|
|
The recent Harvey Weinstein scandal has brought a lot of those issues to the fore.
|
|
The church was at the fore of labor reform, civil rights, and other progressive movements.
|
|
Issues around trust and intimacy will come to the fore over the next few weeks.
|
|
CONTINETTI: Once the pictures of the families came to the fore, that is the issue.
|
|
Dulos' husband is the president and CEO of the Fore Group, a local construction company.
|
|
In the days following Mr Bolsonaro's victory his economic plans have been to the fore.
|
|
Of course, other insecurities came to the fore over the years — is my nose massive?
|
|
The old ways of life – before malls displaced them – are coming back to the fore.
|
|
Emotionally, issues like security and your relationship to your belongings will come to the fore.
|
|
That possibility, though, brings to the fore a shadow over the future of Chinese science.
|
|
The rear seats don't slide fore and aft to max out leg or cargo room.
|
|
Cracks could also emerge within Erdogan's AKP, bringing the economic troubles more to the fore.
|
|
I imagine having their own children has also brought issues to the fore for them.
|
|
Some new way of presenting art will come to the fore soon enough, I imagine.
|
|
And still the echo of history rages to the fore, its howl demanding stronger countermeasures.
|
|
The Moon and Mercury both enter Taurus today, bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
|
|
Major Stephen Fore, spokesman for the DeKalb police, could not immediately be reached for comment.
|
|
But where Google's new "opinionated" approach really comes to the fore is in the software.
|
|
Humanity for the children was at the fore in our analysis of the way forward.
|
|
Vergil Glynn Daniel was born to Roy Daniel and the former Vergie Fore on Dec.
|
|
I do not want other refugees to think that we push ourselves to the fore.
|
|
When speculative and, especially, Ponzi financing come to the fore, financial systems are more vulnerable.
|
|
Soon, Argentina's underlying macroeconomic challenges came to the fore, accelerating the run on the peso.
|
|
Today the Moon is in, Cancer, your opposite sign, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
|
|
You're in an intense mood today, Aries: Issues around intimacy are coming to the fore.
|
|
But now the issue is coming to the fore — and not because of the president.
|
|
With visuals completely out of the picture, the artists' personalities come brightly to the fore.
|
|
Instead, coming to the fore is a rich shadow play of harmonies and earth tones.
|
|
Last week, her frustration with Waterford and with her own powerlessness came to the fore.
|
|
The war drove Robert and Jimmy Quinlan apart, with more fissures coming to the fore.
|
|
Those are the ones that are fore and aft that go all the way down.
|
|
" The executive director of Unicef, Henrietta Fore, said in a statement: "This is an emergency.
|
|
Which message and bonding persona of a candidate can call that value to the fore?
|
|
Within months of Williamsburg's designation as a city, the discussion again came to the fore.
|
|
It was never America's military might that brought it to the fore of World leadership.
|
|
Carroll's suit could bring those allegations back to the fore, at least to some degree.
|
|
The back seat slides fore and aft and easily takes on two full-size adults.
|
|
That's exactly the sort of backdrop where non-financial issues naturally come to the fore.
|
|
The suspension of Judge Pawel Juszczyszyn last week brought the issue back to the fore.
|
|
Mentioning Russia prominently during the speech would have brought that contentious issue to the fore.
|
|
But soon enough, the main issue of this election — religion — will return to the fore.
|
|
We have seen what I would refer to as homonationalism being pushed to the fore.
|
|
Your ruling planet, Venus, enters Taurus today, bringing sex and intimacy issues to the fore.
|
|
But the backlash against tech that came to the fore in 2017 isn't going away.
|
|
" Presumably Sanders' reggae outfit never covered " but that's my cynicism riding to the fore again.
|
|
Stephen Fore of DeKalb County Police said a policy manual is posted on the department's website.
|
|
At the fore of considerations when it comes to China's demand for energy are environmental factors.
|
|
The Fore people in Papua New Guinea ate parts of the dead until at least 19503.
|
|
The baht is at the fore of Asia's rising currencies and up 4 percent this year.
|
|
At Thursday's presidential debate, those frictions came to the fore – and Joe Biden bore the brunt.
|
|
Since his arrest, other more hardline leaders with more militant followings have come to the fore.
|
|
Wellness, as well as your day job, is a topic that will come to the fore.
|
|
The seeds of success have been planted with people, partnerships and public leadership at the fore.
|
|
London police's first record of looting on Fore Street came 45 minutes later at 10:40PM.
|
|
The Moon is in Leo today, bringing issues around money and self-worth to the fore.
|
|
But the past few weeks, issues around sexual harassment and assault have come to the fore.
|
|
However, a Ryder Cup spokesperson says "fore" was shouted several times before it hit the fan.
|
|
The Moon enters Pisces this evening, bringing issues concerning cash and self-worth to the fore.
|
|
Issues concerning sex and intimacy will come to the fore, as will some complicated financial situations.
|
|
Unexpected home or family issues will come to the fore, and you can expect surprising news.
|
|
Louisville's Khwan Fore hit a jumper before an NC State timeout at the 4:03 mark.
|
|
The Moon is in Capricorn, so expect issues concerning your relationships to come to the fore.
|
|
It has to provide fore-aft traction so you can launch into a sprint without slipping.
|
|
The Sun enters Gemini this evening, bringing complicated issues concerning cash and sex to the fore.
|
|
I DON'T THINK THE FORE FATHERS REALLY THOUGHT OF IT THAT WAY, BUT I DON'T KNOW.
|
|
To the man who taught us how to cause #goodtrouble & brings values to the fore everyday.
|
|
The numbers could drop further during the next administration, according to the Center fore Responsive Politics.
|
|
These fading political risks have quickly made way for stronger fundamentals to return to the fore.
|
|
And the Democratic National Committee email leak brought the primary-season divisions back to the fore.
|
|
Seats in the middle slide fore and aft, so there's little issue with space or comfort.
|
|
Issues around sex, trust, and sharing will come to the fore over the next few weeks.
|
|
But as more and more questions came really to the fore -- how did this get started?
|
|
The white supremacists who converged on Charlottesville understand their role in bringing Trump to the fore.
|
|
Why it matters: Each generation of digital media brings new voices and firms to the fore.
|
|
But the release of Springsteen's autobiography Born to Run dragged far darker topics to the fore.
|
|
Issues around sex, intimacy, and trust will come to the fore, as will complex financial issues.
|
|
Complicated issues of money will also come to the fore—things like death, taxes, and inheritances.
|
|
But the release of Springsteen's autobiography Born to Run dragged far darker topics to the fore.
|
|
The attention to pay equity is increasingly at the fore of public debates on labor issues.
|
|
The Moon will enter your opposite sign Cancer later today, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
|
|
Financial issues may also come to the fore, especially tricky things like debts, taxes, or inheritances.
|
|
I had to start where I could bring ideas of legacy and posterity to the fore.
|
|
Curators and museums should follow HeK's lead in bringing more of their work to the fore.
|
|
Henrietta Fore, Unicef's executive director, said that education in Afghanistan was "under fire," in a statement.
|
|
Health care has been the fore-front of national conversation during the 2628 Democratic primary season.
|
|
FORE is part of FORENSICS at 3D and LONG is part of GO ALONG at 10D.
|
|
S. trade tensions - and their potential impact on demand for industrial metals - returned to the fore.
|
|
Love, whether sacred or profane, comes to the fore in some of the season's prominent releases.
|
|
But what most distinguished the debate was the way in which gender came to the fore.
|
|
Row 2 pampers with a separate climate zone and heated seating that slides fore and aft.
|
|
Mr. Netanyahu has desperately tried to change the subject, repeatedly bringing security threats to the fore.
|
|
The 2016 presidential election drew to the fore a systemic problem in our society: media bias.
|
|
Almost immediately, the underlying tension I had felt about intimate relationships really came to the fore.
|
|
Crude prices languishing near 2017 lows are also keeping the over-supply issue to the fore.
|
|
The Nobel Prize given to Duflo, Banerjee, and Kremer has brought these disagreements to the fore.
|
|
She has been unwell in recent years and has been pushing her son to the fore.
|
|
Issues concerning your sex life are coming to the fore, as are some complicated financial issues.
|
|
Issues around trust and intimacy will come to the fore, as will some feelings of grief.
|
|
We know that this isn't true, and this study's findings bring that reality to the fore.
|
|
It will be the first since 1994, and Birdsall intends to bring Beard's queerness to the fore.
|
|
Fotis Dulos is president and CEO of the Fore Group, a Farmington company that builds custom homes.
|
|
An outbreak of kuru is believed to have killed roughly 1,000 Fore people in the late 1950s.
|
|
Critical changes around finances—especially shared resources, debts, taxes, or inheritances—will also come to the fore.
|
|
The issue of keeping or eliminating private insurance came to the fore in January when California Sen.
|
|
And now a new generation of inexperience charismatic leftists are moving to the fore of the party.
|
|
These questions came to the fore in several films which played at this year's London Film Festival.
|
|
Another throwaway element of the original that's brought to the fore here is the time and place.
|
|
This comes to the fore in the book's final scene, the nighttime drive to find Chuck's killer.
|
|
Infrastructure spending in particular is at the fore of governments' minds as a way to boost growth.
|
|
For one thing, riskier and more economically attuned stocks have roared to the fore in recent months.
|
|
Yet, even with that success, issues of culture and values have come to the fore longer term.
|
|
On Tuesday, before Portal could even materialize in stores, privacy issues once again came to the fore.
|
|
PRAGUE (Reuters) - Czech-Slovak investment bank Penta's offer price for the remaining shares in Fortuna Entertainment FORE.
|
|
Issues of racism and power came to the fore which challenged the power dynamics within the collective.
|
|
Underwater melodic tones and percussive samples are brought fantastically to the fore when you listen on headphones.
|
|
The HDZ then jettisoned its leader, who had allowed the party's Ustasha-admiring elements to the fore.
|
|
Concerns about renewed sectarian tensions and political divisions surrounding a possible border have returned to the fore.
|
|
The infighting came to the fore in recent weeks with major opposition leaders publicly criticizing each other.
|
|
But even the plan behind forcing this issue to the fore took no small bit of imagination.
|
|
"There are 11 million children in need of humanitarian aid in this war-torn country," Fore said.
|
|
On the contrary, art and creativity has ever been at the fore of The BAY's mission statement.
|
|
You're in an intense mood today, with deep issues concerning trust and intimacy coming to the fore.
|
|
It's also left the stage clear for other leaders to come to the fore on the issue.
|
|
In Wiltshire, England, where he lived since the 1980s, his tenderness and generosity were at the fore.
|
|
Issues about your home and family will come to the fore, and you're going to feel sensitive.
|
|
Click here fore more information on the works in Ronin Gallery's Ghosts, Demons and the Bizarre exhibition.
|
|
Global collaboration came to the fore in Bonn showing that Paris is becoming a real-world reality.
|
|
In A.S.M.R. videos, people engage in regular tasks while drawing those second-order pleasures to the fore.
|
|
Throughout the show, Apóstol brings the past to the fore, demonstrating Tucumán arde's relevance in the present.
|
|
Timehouse Muzeum: the Time Travellers Museum and Narnia Totnes Shop, 69 Fore Street, Totnes, South Devon; narniatotnes.co.uk.
|
|
Those qualities were certainly to the fore in the award of the prize for physiology or medicine.
|
|
More broadly, the concern over the outbreak is again bringing resentment of the mainland to the fore.
|
|
The Brexit saga has pushed nationalism and regionalism to the fore in British politics, ahead of economics.
|
|
Funerary cannibalism was practiced by groups like the Fore of New Guinea and the Wari' of Brazil.
|
|
We have seen the contradictions between tech giants and European governments come to the fore over time.
|
|
In short, with climate policy coming to the fore, Western societies are coming apart at the seams.
|
|
Masks will fall, and the glitz may disappear as the economy's inherent weaknesses come to the fore.
|
|
"Conflicts around the world are lasting longer, causing more bloodshed and claiming more young lives," said Fore.
|
|
A pair of shootings in Texas and Ohio last month thrust the gun debate to the fore.
|
|
In Carry On, all the questions that fanfiction has been asking for decades come to the fore.
|
|
The story has brought to the fore questions of how race and class factor into college admissions.
|
|
In spite of my fears, it was my father who came to the fore as my ally.
|
|
SOVIET ART PUT TO THE TEST' Edited by Matthew S. Witkovsky and Devin Fore (Yale University Press).
|
|
Nonetheless, "civilization" seems likely to continue to occupy the fore of foreign policy under the Trump administration.
|
|
AT THE FORE FRONT: Donald Trump hit the golf course way quicker than any of his predecessors.
|
|
Whether you're coupled or not, issues concerning you and another person's shared resources come to the fore.
|
|
"As they moved forward, it was really about the presidential system coming to the fore," Stein says.
|
|
Unicef's executive director, Henrietta H. Fore, said in a statement that she had accepted Mr. Forsyth's resignation.
|
|
We have fore deployed our forces to help counter some of the aggressiveness of Russia along the border.
|
|
Now the series is openly winking at its audience while pushing its more "idiosyncratic" contestants to the fore.
|
|
Some Democrats have wondered aloud if it is time for a new generation to move into the fore.
|
|
Given slowing growth and rising penetration, we see saturation fears coming back to the fore on Alphabet shares.
|
|
Thanks to nearly straight pipes running from fore to aft, the V12 sings a very loud song indeed.
|
|
The result has been chaos: a rudderless party where personal disagreements have started to come to the fore.
|
|
"Supply-side issues returned to the fore, with crude oil prices rising strongly," ANZ bank said on Tuesday.
|
|
But Parnas is confident the fruits of their work will come to the fore in the presidential campaign.
|
|
Jesse: I think the sense of mystery or illusion has come to the fore as I've gotten older.
|
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Now it looks like the fore person in the jury, in the Roger Stone case, had significant bias.
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But Pizzella, currently deputy Labor secretary, has his own controversial past that will likely come to the fore.
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"Woman Power," once a murky psych freak-out, refocuses with Ono's still-potent political manifesto at the fore.
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Get the tools you use most often to the fore by choosing File, then Options, then Customize Ribbon.
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Now, some surprising figures have come to the fore to voice mass frustration on the issues at hand.
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Expect conversations about money to come to the fore as communication planet Mercury enters Taurus on May 13.
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It makes sense that Melanie will behave differently depending on 'who' is to the fore in her mind.
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The Moon is in Air sign Gemini, little scorpion, bringing issues around intimacy and trust to the fore.
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The threat of losing their livelihoods brings racism to the fore and takes "Sweat" to its violent climax.
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ON THE rich world's long march away from heavy industry, Britain once again finds itself to the fore.
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I am not suggesting that community comes to the fore only during a Fourth Turning—far from it.
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Not only is it reviving a classic series, it's doing so with a female cast at the fore.
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As each of these stories, and others, develop, Trump's divisive behavior and positions will return to the fore.
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And yet no other politician has managed to come to the fore while in prison as he has.
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The changes in the east have social, cultural and political consequences which are now coming to the fore.
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Since her initial offering, Chung has produced celebrated collections that bring the dreaminess of storytelling to the fore.
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In many other parts of the country, too, education has moved to the fore in this election season.
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After decades of neglect from academics, they are coming to the fore in museum shows and private collections.
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Environmental issues will also come to the fore following Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord.
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But try to be at the fore-front of change to better understand it and deal with it.
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The Moon is illuminating the partnership sector of your chart today, Libra, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
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The female subject returns to the fore in "Esther" (2012), another example of Wulff's major/minor iconographical hierarchy.
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The Moon is in Waters sign Pisces today, bringing issues around self-worth and money to the fore.
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Dark Lotus will be released on digital and vinyl formats February 10, and is available fore pre-order.
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And the fact that it was located in the fore-fin suggests it was more like a hand.
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In 2010, Benedict wrote a letter to Ireland's Catholics when the abuse scandal came to the fore there.
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The Moon enters warm Fire sign Leo this evening, bringing issues around trust and intimacy to the fore.
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This could shift priorities within the legislature and change the type of issues that rise to the fore.
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Venus Williams has also returned to the fore after struggling for several years to manage an autoimmune disorder.
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It is not only the "beef, Bible and bullet" message that has brought Mr. Bolsonaro to the fore.
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It brings her into a literary conversation that has not traditionally put people like her at the fore.
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News reports that Russia is already interfering in the upcoming election have returned the issue to the fore.
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Skilled and semiskilled workers have been at the fore of almost all national-populist revolts in recent history.
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Rozzi's personal story put him at the fore of a push for a similar bill two years ago.
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Her attempt, she insists, is just to bring the most interesting voices to the fore, rich or poor.
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The outbreak has simply brought these xenophobic sentiments to the fore, strengthening them with confirmation bias and fear.
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AS IF IN RESPONSE, a number of floral designers are bringing grass, eternally a backdrop, to the fore.
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Formal investigations rarely lend the moral clarity needed to bring not one but multiple sources to the fore.
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Fotis Dulos is president and CEO of the Fore Group, a Farmington-based company that builds custom homes.
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Issues around sex and intimacy will also come to the fore, now that the Moon is in Virgo.
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The vehicle, a black Ford Raptor pickup, is registered to Fore Group LLC, a company owned by Fotis Dulos.
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These themes continue to be at the fore of your life when Sagittarius season kicks off on November 21.
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With immigration at the fore front of the current debate, several of these races look even more interesting. Rep.
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Fotis Dulos is president and CEO of the Fore Group, a Farmington, Connecticut-based company that builds custom homes.
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Geopolitical risks have risen to the fore quite strongly, said Bart Wakabayashi, Tokyo branch manager at State Street Bank.
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"Every time you yell fore from that distance nobody is going to hear you," he told Sky Sports News.
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"Queer Eye" is a makeover show, but one which brings contemporary issues to the fore in almost every episode.
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Over the next few weeks, conversations concerning your home, your family, or your roommates will come to the fore.
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She's extremely professional and enjoying the fact that that side of her life is coming to the fore again.
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"She perked right up after about an hour outside the bag," said MSPCA shelter associate director Anna Rafferty-Fore.
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And the voice proclaims that for centuries Europe has fore-fed us with lies and bloated us with pestilence.
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Extremist positions have also come to the fore in a more insidious manner, which is proving harder to combat.
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What guts it must have taken to push these issues to the fore instead of keeping them locked away.
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I wanted to change that and to bring untested ideas to the fore that could disrupt the media space.
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And some of technology's biggest names took a breath, allowing lesser-known tech players to come to the fore.
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The Moon moves into emotional water sign Scorpio this evening, bringing issues around sex and intimacy to the fore.
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The argument over sharp rises in the price of medicines came to the fore again in America's presidential campaign.
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Beckham came to the fore a century later when the court ruled the opposite way in Bush v. Gore.
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Brazilian torrent frogs also engage in fore-limb and hind-limb displays to catch the attention of a mate.
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Another problem that's come to the fore is the fact that lorises aren't just being bought as pets anymore.
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The DSA could organize boycotts of exploitive landlords, to help bring the issue of housing costs to the fore.
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So the divisiveness is going to come to the fore immediately, and we'll see how he responds to that.
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Full moons bring things to light, and as we discussed, some secrets are sure to come to the fore!
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These ideas about parenting or not parenting, and sex, come to the fore when somebody faces an unplanned pregnancy.
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If this question has now lost its urgency, the debate over globalization has brought new questions to the fore.
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He's brought issues to the fore this campaign that others haven't, and he has the courage of his convictions.
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Until now, they had never found the complete skeleton of the pectoral fin, also known as the fore-fin.
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Your body actually shrinks a little throughout the day, so extra fore and aft seat travel makes a difference.
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When used critically, they can chip away at harmful stereotypes, pushing more accurate perceptions and understandings to the fore.
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It is through the extensive research that the tight layers of critical discourse amongst friends come to the fore.
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With smaller ensembles, his commanding pianism — equal parts Thelonious Monk, Chucho Valdés and Bill Evans — bursts to the fore.
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Deep, intense feelings come to the fore, and you'll learn just how intimate you and your partners can get!
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The impassioned debate over the immigration order brought to the fore issues at the heart of the Trump presidency.
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But when that statute was struck down by Spain's constitutional court in 2010, the tensions came to the fore.
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The back seat no longer slides fore and aft (eliminated because some second-generation owners never knew it did).
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But there are naturally uncertainties about his ability to recover quickly and return to the fore at his age.
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But his regime responded with force, moderate Syrian activists were targeted and eventually the extremists rose to the fore.
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"Schools should be havens of peace," said Henrietta Fore, the executive director of Unicef, the United Nations Children's Fund.
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Geopolitical tensions returned to the fore after North Korea launched a ballistic missile that flew over Japan on Tuesday.
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"(The BJP has) faced a tough opposition campaign, (and) their vulnerabilities have also come to the fore," Jha says.
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"I think other controversies will take the fore," said Sabato, director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics.
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Fore said UNICEF's biggest priority is getting children into school, with a quarter of a billion missing out worldwide.
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Because of this, Kennedy and his colleagues now find themselves at the federal fore of a civil rights movement.
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I'd argue that you can see some of that tech and general approach coming to the fore here as well.
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Trump, leaning heavily on Breitbart's readership, with the addition of his own bombast, has brought these fears to the fore.
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Fotis Dulos He is president and CEO of the Fore Group, a Farmington, Connecticut-based company that builds custom homes.
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Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore; you'll be sharing deep feelings and secrets with your partners.
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Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore today, as the Moon is in sensual Earth sign Taurus.
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Relationship issues will come to the fore today, as the Moon in Leo illuminates the partnership sector of your chart.
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In stark fashion, the race brought to the fore complex narratives concerning race, gender, ambition, sexuality, political strategy, and protest.
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"I think we'd be just fine and the benefits of lower oil for the consumer would come to the fore."
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Last year's Obamacare repeal fight really brought this issue to the fore, and people might be reassessing their prior beliefs.
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Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore, as will complicated financial situations like taxes, debts, and inheritances.
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|
But in his new book, Catch and Kill, New Yorker reporter Ronan Farrow brings those allegations back to the fore.
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"Marriage steals childhood," the charity's Executive Director Henrietta Fore said in a statement as the report was released on Friday.
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|
But, a backlash from the investment community over the merits of monetary policy has once again come to the fore.
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Certain strains of evangelical thought that many members of the mainstream media have long dismissed have come to the fore.
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The Moon is in materially minded Earth sign Taurus today, bringing issues around finances and self-worth to the fore.
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Polling data shows high levels of hostility to immigrants going back decades, and mass immigration brought it to the fore.
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Pisces season will be a very emotionally sensitive time with sex and intimacy issues coming to the fore for Leos.
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It came to the fore when the economy tanked, as corporations looked for new ways to inspire customers to shop.
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Brent and U.S. crude oil futures prices dropped as worries about oversupply in the oil market returned to the fore.
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This is especially true today, during the lunar eclipse in sensitive Pisces, which will bring domestic issues to the fore.
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The question of what the social welfare state should do with its aging population is often at the political fore.
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Over the past two months, however, jitters about French presidential elections in April and May have come to the fore.
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But Booker, who would be the first U.S. president descended from slaves, has frequently brought the subject to the fore.
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"The trade tariff pain is clearly starting to come to the fore in companies connected to autos," one trader wrote.
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The Moon in Sagittarius is highlighting relationship issues, so expect intimacy-related problems to come to the fore this evening.
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PRIVACY TO THE FORE Throughout the presentation, Apple executives stressed privacy protections for consumers as they shop and consume content.
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Meredith Fore likes her hard cider ice-cold and writes for WIRED about physics as an AAAS Mass Media Fellow.
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Hence the near-disbelief that gripped the House of Commons, in 1939, when he came once more to the fore.
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The news of a female-led Star Trek comes as more properties are getting refreshes with women at the fore.
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Then last year I visited the virtual reality lab at Stanford, which is at the fore of contemporary immersive journalism.
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To disguise the stench from the decomposing emperor, they hired carts of rotting fish to rumble along fore and aft.
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Nonetheless, Republicans should move this issue to the fore if they are to maintain the support of their traditional allies.
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I think an interesting question is whether a "Better Trump" could come to the fore in 2020 should he lose.
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Anything involving banks brings to the fore the conflicts in his Administration between the Wall Streeters and the anti-globalists.
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" But Henrietta H. Fore, the executive director of the agency, said in the report that "these cases haven't happened overnight.
|
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The week's hearings could represent a turning point for the internet giants as discussions of regulation come to the fore.
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These Methodist and Baptist ecclesiastical arguments would re-emerge as secular issues at the fore in the Dred Scott case.
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Khwan Fore had 14 points, Jacob Gilyard had 13 and Nick Sherod 12 points and nine rebounds in the loss.
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In Silicon Valley alone, a number of haunting sexual assault accusations have come to the fore in the past years.
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Impermanent art, like graffiti and performance, came to the fore in the Lower East Side in the 2000s and 80s.
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Kirke: I like that it's an ambiguous element of the film, but it wasn't at the fore of my mind.
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The Moon enters Cancer and illuminates a very private sector of your chart, bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
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Like the very best groundbreaking pop albums, underground sounds are brought to the fore on Maths + English without being butchered.
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That moment where everything falls away and those echoey keys come through to the fore amidst alien-sounding vocal sighs.
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But on Tuesday, Reade's allegation came to the fore again when Grim reported on its general outline in the Intercept.
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The suicides brought to the fore a longstanding problem for New York City police and officers all over the country.
|
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As this eternally boyish comic has moved into his 50s, this aspect of his appeal has come to the fore.
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All of this brings to the fore concerns about the global economy's ability to withstand a shock from the coronavirus.
|
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New social groups — the communities fashion serves, or should serve — are emerging and coming to fore, new value sets cohering.
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The conventional values like dominance, aggression, wealth, athleticism, sexual conquest — and, particularly, emotional suppression — came roaring back to the fore.
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Fore more on the company, click on The engineering group is due to report second-quarter earnings at 1130 GMT.
|
|
As my father later explained, windowless cabins and those at the fore of the ship are the worst for seasickness.
|
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In Unnikrishnan's imaginings, this ever-present threat of displacement comes to the fore only during his characters' most naked moments.
|
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" But, as the drums stutter to a stop, an audio sample from a protest comes to the fore: "Hands up!
|
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"In East Ghouta alone, hundreds of children are in urgent need of medical evacuation," said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.
|
|
The heyday of disco, in the nineteen-seventies, was defined by conflicts that have recently come to the fore again.
|
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It is not surprising that people with a pro-competitive, pro-business, anti-big government philosophy came to the fore.
|
|
But at points the testimony of the scholars grew heated as the stakes of the debate came to the fore.
|
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He did not seek office when Law and Justice retook Parliament in 2015, pushing more acceptable candidates to the fore.
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It's good for the museum to bring these issues to the fore in a range of ways, even uncomfortable ones.
|
|
But in 2020, some disability issues are coming to the fore, even if they aren't being explicitly approached as such.
|
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People are being brought out to the fore, so far that I know virtually none of it related to the campaign.
|
|
Following the war, Rhee's strongman instincts came to the fore, as he declared martial law and made himself president-for-life.
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One ability that has come to the fore in recent years is Holloway's ability and willingness to fight from both stances.
|
|
They repeatedly bring to the fore questions about how their personal identities — in terms of gender, age, race, profession, sexuality, etc.
|
|
These theories become more and more complicated and important as the more magical aspects of the show come to the fore.
|
|
It ended up being a more cohesive way of bringing that secret hipster hiding inside the pop star to the fore.
|
|
At home in all the major powers, growing populism, nativism, and jingoism come to the fore, militating against saving the world.
|
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But her nomination would bring the filibuster reform battle, which has left many GOP senators still bitter, back to the fore.
|
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The system is broken but the good news is that the advent of smartphones is bringing usable data to the fore.
|
|
This disparity was brought to the fore in 2014, when Salinas police shot and killed four Hispanic men in separate encounters.
|
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Officers brought the child to a hospital for an evaluation, where health officials discovered she had been sexually assaulted, Fore said.
|
|
I turn her hand over, which is still lying in mine, and place my fore and middle fingers on her wrist.
|
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Jim Cramer feels like we're in a market waiting to unravel, but the bearish news just isn't coming to the fore.
|
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Fake news came to the fore during the 2016 US election and the Brexit referendum in the UK earlier that year.
|
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Weidner says that the election has brought many deep-seated biases to the fore for young people, including racism and Islamaphobia.
|
|
These rose to the fore after former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden leaked details about the U.S. government's Internet spying programmes.
|
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That has brought GM crops to the fore, especially maize, a staple crop grown and consumed in most sub-Saharan countries.
|
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Folds' passion for photography will be at the fore, with Havana-based photographers leading workshops and guided tours across the city.
|
|
Big money is still a fact of life in congressional races and it will undoubtedly return to the fore in 2020.
|
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Your day job, your habits, and your approach to wellness are all themes that are going to come to the fore.
|
|
Palestine isn't on Google's map, and it never has been, but the issue has come to the fore again this week.
|
|
Fore was administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development from 2006 to 2009, the first woman to lead the agency.
|
|
"Political uncertainty in the Middle East has returned to the fore," the IEA said in its closely-watched report published Friday.
|
|
Trade tensions, which had recently yielded some of the spotlight to nuclear negotiations, could also make a return to the fore.
|
|
Warren's bill has brought these issues to the fore more so than any moment since Larry Fink's annual letter to shareholders.
|
|
Yet there's a great organ riff, a killer guitar break and some sharp funky brass sounds now brought to the fore.
|
|
The next calendar year should also see two competing political ideologies come to the fore, according to The Economist's Daniel Franklin.
|
|
Now, suddenly, he is at the fore of a transition to youth for his home club and maybe for his country.
|
|
But this minor alteration pushes some important questions to the fore: What does the park reveal about the people who visit?
|
|
Geopolitical tensions came to the fore again overnight after North Korea's foreign minister said U.S. President Donald Trump had declared war.
|
|
This year's boosters are essentially high-flying tech stocks, while this month, big banks and energy companies have taken the fore.
|
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It's a conversation that, as Americans know too well, tends to bring a country's dumbest, most regressive opinions to the fore.
|
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The restrictions have come to the fore as the Trump administration scrambles for ways to prop up ailing companies, including airlines.
|
|
Climate activists are looking for a new, post-Keystone focus, and "keep it in the ground" has risen to the fore.
|
|
Mateen's attack was a terrible and year-defining incident that has driven the issue of mass gun violence to the fore.
|
|
When this year's research catch was available, he put a nearly raw version, "shocked" with local vinegar, on Fore Street's menu.
|
|
Republicans have, on occasion, pressed similarly to bring issues to the fore — think of Rand Paul's opposition to federal surveillance policy.
|
|
It helps brings old emotions to the fore, momentarily sweeping away disorientation caused by the resident's irreversible, progressive loss of faculties.
|
|
Victorian technology caused a major cultural shift and brought the middle class to the fore through media, manufacturing, capitalist marketing, entertainment.
|
|
The roots of populist discontent that propelled Ms. Le Pen to the fore have not magically disappeared with Mr. Macron's victory.
|
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Yet he has suddenly been pushed to the fore of this crisis, helming a national response group and visiting Wuhan itself.
|
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He is 22004-1-2 in singles, the format where his superior ability and single-minded focus come to the fore.
|
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After Castro brought the issue of decriminalizing border crossing to the fore last summer, Warren was quick to adopt his ideas.
|
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At that dinner, the couple shared their first kiss and immediately, with scientific fact-finding at the fore, established their relationship.
|
|
It was Henrietta Fore, Unicef's executive director — not Erica Vogel, a Unicef spokeswoman — who said, "Schools should be havens of peace."
|
|
Its $11.5 billion share sale earlier this week brought those concerns to the fore, though investors like its attractive dividend yield.
|
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And for every violation that is verified there are many more that go undocumented, according to UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.
|
|
This year, the growing size of market came to the fore when the largest secondaries deal ever was reported in May.
|
|
The past few days have seen brands and personalities quit Facebook, and now New Zealand's privacy commissioner has joined the fore.
|
|
Whatever it was, Ms. Hay, who had been making mommy-and-me dresses since 2016, suddenly found herself at the fore.
|
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Anyway, Tchelitchew and the rest of them were swept aside when the Abstract Expressionists came to the fore in the 1940s.
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"Today's small flight by drone is a big leap for global health," UNICEF executive director Henrietta Fore said in a statement.
|
|
But in these artist-focused rooms, Cahun's photographs are allowed to breathe and her fascinating life is brought to the fore.
|
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The fore-edge of the book having a spider web on it was referencing Anansi always being connected to the boy's lives.
|
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These are the fore- and background characters whose relationships with the main character form the backbone of the Persona series these days.
|
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And it is this specific intersection of gender and climate that Mayor Hidalgo's leadership of the C40 has brought to the fore.
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" As an example, he cited the Rolex Military Submariner, a rare military-issue timepiece that has "really started to come to fore.
|
|
She's a grey goof, dumb and storyless, except when her shared history with Banks comes to the fore, which it often does.
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As usual, he said, the outcome will depend on factors that neither Democrats nor Republicans control, with economic issues at the fore.
|
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However, the real test will come in the second round, when economic tactics are likely to come to the fore, it noted.
|
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Issues concerning trust and intimacy come to the fore as the Moon in Aries illuminates a very private sector of your chart.
|
|
The primary campaign, and the election next spring, could turn out to be ugly as identity politics are thrust to the fore.
|
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But the issue Trump brought to the fore -- players kneeling during the National Anthem -- was not one of the team's chief concerns.
|
|
Henrietta Fore, executive director of the U.N. Children's Fund UNICEF, said the "horrific" attack marked "a low point in (Yemen's) brutal war".
|
|
If the healthcare bill fails, these criticisms will likely come to the fore when the party and the press conduct their postmortems.
|
|
The city, a C-shape peninsula surrounded by Casco Bay, Back Cove and the Fore River, is the largest in the state.
|
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"Today's small flight by drone is a big leap for global health," UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta H. Fore said in a statement.
|
|
And Mr. Payton, who has lately been honing his skills as a studio auteur, brings a few fresh ideas to the fore.
|
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Two characteristics come to the fore in relation to the global migration crisis: the first is confusion and the second is ambivalence.
|
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A full moon in Taurus arrives early tomorrow morning, bringing an issue concerning your home, family, or living situation to the fore.
|
|
The Sun enters Aquarius this evening, activating the home and family sector of your chart and bringing these themes to the fore.
|
|
The middle-row seats slide fore and aft to max out legroom there, or to show those in row three some love.
|
|
It was good to see the guys really come out, get on the forecheck and create a couple of fore-checking goals.
|
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Xi has increasingly come to the fore in recent weeks, however, as China has appeared to successfully brought the outbreak under control.
|
|
Issues of citizenship and solidarity — that is to say, asking what it means to be an American — have returned to the fore.
|
|
While geopolitical issues have sprung to the fore, subtler shifts in the backdrop of the stock market might be producing outsize reactions.
|
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That's because he sees, in Trump, a politician who is bringing his own strategy for attacking left-wing culture to the fore.
|
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By bringing it to the fore, they built a wave of political support totally out of proportion to their actual organizational strength.
|
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Whether talking about Toronto's biggest musical export or prompting a youth-driven regime change, his sincerity and honesty remain at the fore.
|
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But in the world of underground electronic music, in which Berlin predominantly traffics, it's undeniable that women have come to the fore.
|
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Some, like Deval Patrick, the former Massachusetts governor, have used the moment to return to the political fore after some time away.
|
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The vibe will heat up in your intimate relationships; action planet Mars will bring issues concerning sex and closeness to the fore.
|
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Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads For 23 years, Urbanworld Film Festival has brought a diverse slate of cinema to the fore.
|
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A general disconnect from society comes to the fore in two films screening together, Ben Rivers's Ghost Strata and Denis Côté's Wilcox.
|
|
"Millions of Syrian children are crying tonight - from hunger and cold, from wounds and pain, from fear, loss and heartbreak," Fore said.
|
|
Today, the lesson of Iraq hangs over everything, and Twitter has brought both anti-war and non-American voices to the fore.
|
|
On the other side of the country, "The Uninvited" was featured in an exhibition called "Fore" at the Studio Museum in Harlem.
|
|
At the tables in the back, on the other hand, the restaurant's "Bonfire of the Vanities" alter ego comes to the fore.
|
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Cramer also noticed health care stocks starting to come back to the fore and shared his cardinal rule for spotting market rotations.
|
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It will embolden people to come to the fore ... so we can find the business people who are tampering within the ANC.
|
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The online music hub ReverbNation has established a track record of success in bringing new talent to the fore in popular music.
|
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"Today's small flight by drone is a big leap for global health," Henrietta H. Fore, UNICEF's executive director, said in a statement yesterday.
|
|
Charlotte has experience from the DNC in 2012, but our guess is that this cycle will bring more malign actors to the fore.
|
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The future of Deutsche Bank's investment banking operations has returned to the fore after the collapse of merger talks with smaller rival Commerzbank.
|
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In 2012, the brutal gang rape of a young woman in the nation's capital, brought the issue of sexual violence to the fore.
|
|
Ribot's version is sparse and understated, its acoustic slides leaving plenty of space for Waits' voice to bring the lyrics to the fore.
|
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This should have been brought to the fore it should have been brought up long ago and that's what you have hearings for.
|
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The Georgia primary is a microcosm of that existential crisis, bringing delicate but explosive questions about race and party politics to the fore.
|
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Many countries, with India at the fore, insist that Doha-round development issues must be dealt with before new issues can be tackled.
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Further, I would be the only one to shout, "Fore!" if a ball came too close to the group in front of us.
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I think that is coming to the fore for both of them – even more now they are starting to have their own families.
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The Deutsche Bank story, which rippled across markets Thursday, has been moving to the fore as a risk because of fear of contagion.
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But GDC's decision to highlight Bushnell — undoubtedly an important figure in the history of games — may bring that uncomfortable conversation to the fore.
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Tonight's full moon in Scorpio is very emotional for you, Leo, as issues concerning your home and family life come to the fore.
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Synthetic biology will certainly get caught up in the post-eugenic discussions of such matters that CRISPR has brought to the fore today.
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Indeed, perhaps Coates's most intriguing new character, Zenzi, throws Wakanda into crisis by bringing the citizenry's conflicted feelings toward T'Challa to the fore.
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In the new ACA dispute, the role of the judiciary is as much at the fore as are the complexities of health care.
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While ISIS is surely the first-order problem in terrorism, other threats are likely to come to the fore during a Trump presidency.
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Also, embedded in the statement is that fact that governance issues will be forced to the fore as financial markets (in China) internationalize.
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If we talk about normality instead, a whole new field of insights comes to the fore, including that of compliance with a norm.
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The issue came to the fore last week when news broke that former President Bill Clinton had boarded Attorney General Loretta Lynch's plane.
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Much of this came to the fore when a U.S. Court of Appeals allowed one of the cases, American Electric Power Co. v.
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The attack overshadowed the last day of campaigning for Sunday's presidential election first round, bringing raw issues surrounding Islamist militancy to the fore.
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A seasoned leader with expertise in a multitude of Finance and Business functions, Dipanjan brings over 15 years of experience to the fore.
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When gay marriage has become legal, transgender issues are at the fore and young people today are, if anything, obsessed with defending difference?
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The Sun enters Virgo August 22, lighting up the intimacy sector of your chart and bringing to the fore sex and trust issues.
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Your mind shifts to material matters when communicator Mercury enters Earth sign Virgo on July 30, bringing conversations about cash to the fore.
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The debate came to the fore again last week when Google removed AdNauseam, an anti-tracking browser extension, from the Chrome Web Store.
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Tensions outside the ring had come to the fore inside it, and the result was one of the fiercest fights of the decade.
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The Moon is in Aries today, illuminating the financial sector of your chart and bringing issues around worth and security to the fore.
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Your focus is on your home, family and private life; however, some intense topics will come to the fore, especially concerning your relationships.
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Today's full moon in Libra will bring some issues you may have been avoiding to the fore—you can't ignore things any longer!
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"The one that has always concerned me is the financial issues, which obviously have come much to the fore this week," he said.
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Their actions come at a time when hate crimes against Muslims are on the rise in both Canada and the United States. Fore!
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Other companies that market the drug, not subject to the recall, are Sun Pharma, Mylan, Jubiliant, Aurobindo and Hetero, according to Fore Pharma.
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The question that came to the fore: Is the United States' policy toward Russia what the president says, or what the government does?
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It's a needle-thread between the climate activists who've forced this issue to the fore and the non-voters, undecideds, and swing voters.
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Those connections came to the fore again last week, when the mood became toxic between Lighthizer and Freeland, as the U.S.-imposed Sept.
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Yet the effort to develop 5G standards has brought many new players to the fore, including Huawei, a relative newcomer to the field.
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Yet certain aspects of Biden's political persona fit uncomfortably with a changing Democratic Party, and those problems came to the fore last week.
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In the Trump era and the Trump orbit, these ambassadors of a darker side of the American dream have come to the fore.
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And as hyper-concentrated social justice movements took a back seat, protest songs focused on more general social commentary rose to the fore.
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"Measles may be the disease, but, all too often, the real infection is misinformation, mistrust and complacency," Ms. Fore said at the time.
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For decades, drivers in Portland, Me., sped by Thompson's Point, a forlorn peninsula jutting into the Fore River just west of I-2105.
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It was late March, and all were in favor of Novak Djokovic shaking free of his tennis crisis and returning to the fore.
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" Bob Dylan's take: "One more cup of coffee for the road / One more cup of coffee 'fore I go / To the valley below.
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The Yankees' power is coming to the fore as they extend their lead with solo home runs by Gleyber Torres and Giancarlo Stanton.
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Henrietta Fore, the executive director of UNICEF, said Wednesday that the military escalation would have "dramatic consequences" on the ability to provide aid.
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But President Xi Jinping has also created new ways to put himself and his message of patriotic obedience to the fore this year.
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But in Britain, where questions of identity, sovereignty and perceived threats to the nation have come to the fore, it is particularly acute.
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India and the United States have built close political and security ties, but in recent years trade frictions have come to the fore.
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In subsequent elections as social issues came to the fore, seniors have tended to split their votes more evenly or side with Republicans.
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A three-day event provocatively titled "Who Owns Black Art?" outside of the official Art Basel fair brings this point to the fore.
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Gordon also saw some encouraging signs coming to the fore in Peloton's chart despite the stock's nearly 13% decline so far this month.
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Certainly, Mr. Trump's golf courses in Scotland and Ireland have remained at the fore in the president-elect's mind, even in recent days.
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But she is masterly when she lets more scraped-down prose push a series of elemental questions to the fore: Do intentions matter?
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"Most young Africans now have the chance at primary school education, which has been a big change in the last decade," said Fore.
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Still, with no consensus behind any one path, and a vanishing window for further negotiation, more radical solutions are rising to the fore.
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Yet it's a widespread assumption that even Justice Antonin Scalia brought to the fore last December during oral arguments for the Fisher case.
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"There are no motives in this piece which have to be brought to the fore," Schoenberg wrote when he revised the work in 1949.
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He is a perfect fit for Khuddoos, bringing the character's loneliness and trauma to the fore with a pathos few other actors can manage.
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Expect issues around sex and intimacy to come to the fore, and to hammer out complicated financial issues, especially those that concern shared resources.
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Brod says that encryption "is finally coming to the fore," he said following a U.S. election marked by hacks and leaks of confidential emails.
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How can a country so famous for its liberal politics, which allows prostitution, soft drugs, and gay marriage, also propel Wilders to the fore?
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The modern version of professional and social ruination, however, came to the fore for Gilbert as she watched #MeToo allegations roll out in 213.
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Didi has struggled over the last 18 months, so safety concerns bubbled to the fore following the murder of two female passengers last year.
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The issue of unaccompanied minors came to the fore as their numbers started to increase in 63, spiking in 2014 and garnering international attention.
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A choking of global oil supply has come to the fore of investors' minds, pushing prices up for both Brent and West Texas Intermediate.
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Austria's longstanding nativist streak came to the fore in the summer of 2015, when the European refugee crisis became the continent's dominant political issue.
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And the fact that the neighborhood is near the downtown Arts District across the river has brought the issue of displacement to the fore.
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Besides the United States, migration has again risen to the fore of national political debates in a number of North African and European countries.
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The Moon enters Sagittarius this morning, urging you to take it easy, and intimacy issues come to the fore as the Sun enters Leo.
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Pussy Riot rose to the fore as a collective, but as of now, Tolokno appears to be the most active—and most visible—member.
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Besides the United States, migration has again risen to the fore of national political debates in a number of North African and European countries.
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Billy Bush clearly didn't hear the "FORE!!" on the green ... 'cause he was struck by a golf ball that sent him to the hospital.
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Meanwhile Western governments, with America and Britain to the fore as large donors of aid to Ethiopia, have been notably silent about the turmoil.
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Hierarchies of all kinds, not just class, come to the fore in mysterious ways the film isn't quite prepared to be frank about either.
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Power issues in your relationships will come to the fore at 8:03 PM when the Moon opposes the lord of the underworld, Pluto.
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And as Ms. Anderson says these lines, and others like them, a sense of Blanche as a desperately plotting strategist comes to the fore.
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Iqra at first represents Somalia and something shared, drawing them together, but when Iqra's conservative cultural views come to the fore, Muna is repulsed.
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" While the polls reflect name recognition now, Bringman predicts a diverse group of candidates will come to the fore, and will have "diverse support.
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" Another person talked about how their "anxiety levels have been off the hook and lots of repressed stuff is coming back to the fore.
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But at a time when terrorist attacks have pushed questions of national identity and civic education to the fore, it quickly became politically charged.
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Typically, police unions are at the fore of opposition to the requirements, arguing that officers should have the freedom to choose where to live.
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The topic came to the fore after a reshuffling of House Appropriations subcommittee chairmen this week that was prompted by the departure of Rep.
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Mass shootings have repeatedly thrust the gun debate to the fore over the last decade, though they make up a sliver of gun deaths.
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In recent years, directors like Erik Matti (already an established director of mainstream fare), Raya Martin and Jerrold Tarog have come to the fore.
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What's more, populism's rise has brought anti-Semitism to the fore, catching a Labour Party still struggling with its language on Israel largely unprepared.
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Indeed the insistence that Britain pay up is a sign of the strains that will come to the fore after the transition period ends.
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You're in a sensitive mood today thanks to the Moon entering Water sign Pisces—issues concerning trust and intimacy will come to the fore.
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You're reflecting on your career and your reputation today, thanks to the Moon in Capricorn, and relationship issues are also coming to the fore.
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As far as shaking up the world of cycling and putting British riders to the fore, the sponsorship has undoubtedly been a spectacular success.
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While midwifery is making a comeback in the US, midwife-led deliveries are standard practice in UK hospitals, pushing natural birth to the fore.
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"Measles is a real-time indicator of where we have more work to do to fight preventable diseases," said Henrietta Fore, UNICEF's executive director.
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As Zune died other consumer-focused device efforts came to the fore (Kin, Windows Phone 7, Xbox One) and the music service lived on.
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Austria's longstanding nativist streak came to the fore in the summer of 893, when the European refugee crisis became the continent's dominant political issue.
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And in 2016, both states will also vote in competitive Senate races, in which the candidates are already pushing gun laws to the fore.
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The Dabbers has come to the fore lately because of some of our work being used in several Chuck Palahniuk projects by Mindpollen studios.
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The topic of Germany's spending, or lack of it, has come to the fore this summer as its economy has slipped near recessionary territory.
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Plots for more novels or children's stories, bits of poems and, sometimes, when I'm lucky, just beautiful, intact sentences will come to the fore.
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"Moving into these environments, the political identities that move to the fore are not Republican or Democrat, or conservative or liberal," Mr. Lassiter said.
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The issue Ms. Khan's article really brought to the fore is this: Do we trust Amazon, or any large company, to create our future?
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This attitude returns to the fore this week, with James Comey scheduled to testify on Thursday about Trump's attempts to stifle an F.B.I. investigation.
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But one thing is certain: The Mackey marketing playbook — bringing labor to the fore in order to assure customers that they are A-O.
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The furor led others on Twitter to bring to the fore more criticisms of Bloomberg, like that he has supported Republicans in the past.
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One contract will be for the new jet itself, called F-15EX, and the other will be fore the new jet&aposs F110 engines.
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"Sadly, attacks against the civilian population and infrastructure, as well as against humanitarian and healthcare personnel are seeking to undermine humanitarian efforts," Fore said.
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His speed and talents have since come to the fore and he is now a leading light in the Grand Prix Drivers' Association (GPDA).
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In recent years, Paul Kagame has risen to the fore of the international arena as one of the strongest allies of Israel and Jewry.
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But gently asking, "What's a smart girl like you doing at a party like that?" tends to bring that smart girl to the fore.
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As feminist issues come to the fore in deeply patriarchal South Korea, there's a growing discontent among young men that they're being left behind.
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In "Variations," also from 22014, shades of red prevail fore and aft, but additions of white and black create shifting lights, shadows and shimmers.
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The timeless parts of sensory experience come to the fore, as when Sophie gives Marianne cherrystones heated by the fire for her menstrual cramps.
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Defense Secretary James Mattis was slated to join the briefing, too, as defense spending comes to the fore during a debate over the budget.
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It was another question, one that Trump's candidacy has brought back to the fore: whether, and how strongly, to disavow the Ku Klux Klan.
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That Americans in general — and news organizations in particular — are increasingly using social media has also helped push frank racial discussions to the fore.
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Among those attending the speech were UN Secretary-General António Guterres, World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim and UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.
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Capita's troubles came to the fore during a slowdown in business decision-making after Britain's vote to leave the European Union in June 2016.
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Eminem fundamentally remade hip-hop's relationship to drugs, bringing abuse and addiction to the fore, but also venerating a kind of drug-addled mischief.
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"5.8 million Syrians are on the move, whether externally or internally ... and half of this is children, so children are affected most," Fore said.
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As regulatory problems are worked out, the second big question is coming to the fore: who will make money with e-vehicles and how much?
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As for Google Sheets, again the formatting options are kept to the fore, with formulas, charts, and data filtering options a bit harder to find.
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Video Denuclearization by North Korea will be at the fore in the summit discussions, as will the Hermit Kingdom&aposs role in the global economy.
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Now that issue seems to be coming to the fore anyway, piling more pressure on Lam and creating new headaches for her bosses in Beijing.
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The party that came to the fore amid Germany's migrant crisis and has tapped into discontent over government policies ranging from immigration to the economy.
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This news and the president's tweet brings a question that experts have been debating for months to the fore: is Trump's North Korea policy working?
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Colin Kaepernick brought the issue to the fore in 2016, when he began kneeling for the anthem as a quarterback with the San Francisco 49ers.
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Here are the top five races of the night: The race between the Staceys brought to the fore issues of race, gender, economics, and electability.
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World equity markets slipped as a surprise deterioration in German and South Korean economic data brought back to the fore concerns about a global downturn.
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With all men destined to die — valar morghulis — women have come to the fore of the conflict, not as wives or daughters, but as rulers.
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"It is somewhat provocative to bring the anthem to the fore in a new way at a moment of tension in this country," he said.
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Efforts by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to build inter-caste alliances among Hindus have brought religious differences more to the fore, she believes.
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As Republican consultant Stuart Stevens noted, crime isn't an issue in Senate races, which are usually the battleground where new issues come to the fore.
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China's gloomy factory readings have brought global growth worries to the fore again, which is likely to benefit safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese .
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Recent news about the FBI's investigation of emails from Hillary Clinton's top aide and Donald Trump's dubious tax maneuvers bring these questions to the fore.
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I think we'll see many more things like that start to come to the fore around how we can use technology to hold people accountable.
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"We are denying anything of our members being involved ... there is no evidence which has come to the fore," CWU President Clyde Mervin told Reuters.
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Whilst this is not insurmountable by any means, it brings to the fore the need to effect a change in mind-set inside the boardroom.
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Cross-Atlantic M&A may be coming back to the fore, he said, especially as big European mergers are more difficult due to competition rules.
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The Christian destruction of Greek and Roman monuments came to the fore recently with the 211 publication of journalist Catherine Nixey's book The Darkening Age.
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Noisey Netherlands photographer Tim Ditzel was at the fore for all of this, and shot a series of photos for the offspring of the apocalypse.
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In several closely fought races around the country, candidates' actions and comments regarding gay people have come to the fore and come to define them.
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At the same time, cellphones and social media bring up-to-the-minute relationship issues to the fore, possibly laying bare continuing arguments and fights.
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For the environmentalists, the pressures of negotiation have brought to the fore old strains between the party's "realist" wing and its more left-wing elements.
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This point is where software storage vendors can thrive to the extent they're able to bring new cloud-based data management solutions to the fore.
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ZURICH, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Investor expectations for the Swiss economy slipped in February as uncertainty over global economies and falling prices came to the fore.
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Venus enters your sign, Capricorn, on December 25, and meets with Saturn, bringing issues around love, money, and beauty (all Venusian themes) to the fore.
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It's even more to their credit — and a boon to the future — that they've kept that career's difficulty, and toughness, and nowness to the fore.
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In addition to highlighting the challenges the B&H warehouse workers are still facing, last night's protest brought a few larger questions to the fore.
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But with the rise of the new left in the 1960s in America and in Europe, a new set of issues comes to the fore.
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All of the gender and racial ickiness of the 1933 film — defused or simply erased in the Broadway retelling — is here brought to the fore.
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A 20-year-old American on the rise, she will finally face Williams, the 37-year-old American icon intent on returning to the fore.
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Just when Republicans were settling in to work on a tax overhaul, President Trump brought immigration policy back to the fore, scrambling the party's agenda.
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Kelly crystallizes an uncomfortable tension that's risen to the fore since the Weinstein story hit: What happens when #MeToo meets "I'm not a feminist, but"?
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" Now he's been thrust to the fore with his award-winning performance as a racist police officer, Jason Dixon, in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.
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The euro area is under pressure once again as the coronavirus outbreak shakes up countries in the bloc and brings historic differences to the fore.
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When that's the case, it may be that moral failings and missteps kind of come to the fore more quickly because they will stand out.
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An issue that first came to the fore 52 years ago after passage of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act has yet to be resolved.
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" Henrietta Fore, the executive director of Unicef, who is to visit Syria this weekend, said "we desperately need a cessation of hostilities in northwest Syria.
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Dad special-ordered pounds of just hind feet, which have more bones and cartilage than the fore, to be halved along the bone, just so.
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Now she's at the fore of a new subgenre, which she dubbed "neoperreo" (as in "the new perreo" — an intense style of dancing to reggaeton).
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Democrats maintain that even a failed vote will help them bring the issue of pre-existing conditions to the fore ahead of next month's elections.
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So the key to desensitizing the aryl hydrocarbon receptor was probably already present inside killifish DNA, and natural selection simply brought it to the fore.
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In any case, tax cuts and infrastructure spending plans are likely to be whittled down in Congress, especially if deficit hawks return to the fore.
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It remains unclear why this conversation, which draws Trump more directly to the center of the impeachment probe, is just now coming to the fore.
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But the film, despite various nods, didn't push its way to the fore this season, making Ms. Negga a long shot — one that came through.
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