Nothing had remained of that false moment of intimacy, in June 2009, when he had traveled to Cairo, the self-styled herald of a new American message to the Arab world.
Joseph White, a soldier in the Army National Guard, told The Courier Herald of Dublin he was heading to work when he drove into heavy traffic clouded by black smoke.
In order to get a critical mass of videos up on its site, Google may have compromised its chance at being the herald of a standard, open format--a mission the public would surely have viewed as decidedly not evil.
Will the end of summer herald the return of the retail investor?
It is still the most successful pairing of a medicine and a genetic test, and is frequently used as an example of how the budding science of genomics could herald new ways of fighting cancer.
The budget's introduction is likely to herald one of the fiercest political fights Washington has seen in years, waged on multiple fronts.
He wrote an op-ed, actually, in the Miami Herald ahead of the debate, where he said the Spanish language debate and his participation in it would've offended the spirit of democracy.
Some say the delay reflects fears within the National Transitional Council, the 43-man proto-parliament under Mr Abdul Jalil, that the end of military fighting might herald the onset of harsher political skirmishing.
While I have my deep reservations about the wanton nature with which we are throwing privacy to the curb, I do wonder (perhaps over-hopefully) whether the end of privacy might also herald the end of the often useless feeling of alienated embarrassment.
So, no, the cluttered convention halls of CES 2013 won't necessarily herald the arrival of five- (or even eight-) core CPUs, but we could be in store for tabs outfitted with faster quad-core chips.
Here he is meeting Cecil Beaton, partying with David Bailey in East London, throwing the party of the year in New York to herald the arrival of the Rolling Stones, raising horses in Arizona, releasing an album in July, and "doing up" (though he would hate that term) homes for the likes of Rod Stewart, Charles Saatchi and Princess Michael of Kent.
Meanwhile, the construction of a new data center in North Carolina may herald an era of tighter integration between software and services at Apple.
When buyers began laying out tens of billions of dollars for companies that make pressed tomatoes and desktop computers, observers were sure quick to herald the resumption of crazy Wall Street dealflow.
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Cooley, who organized the production of the papers by 33 members of the Stern faculty over a period of just six weeks, told CNN he believed that recent sharp rises in stock markets could herald the beginnings of a wider recovery.
He departed to assume the post of executive editor at The Miami Herald at the start of 2000.
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Intercut with Smith's journey are reflections on the rarity of paintings like Vermeer's The Concert, and the account of Boston Herald reporter Tom Mashberg 's possible sighting of one of the stolen works, Rembrandt's "Storm on the Sea of Gallilee, " in a Boston warehouse in 1997.
Second, does her victory, as the first woman to lead one of France's main parties, herald a new wave of French women at last grasping their fair share of political power?
"I don't think that's likely any time soon, " said Bob Hammel, the former longtime sports editor of the Bloomington Herald-Times and a close friend of Knight.
The acquisition by News Corp. could herald an era of increased opportunity and growth.
The deal, however, doesn't herald the arrival of any radical new technology for navigating the Web.
Raising council tax would herald a chorus of Conservative and Liberal Democrat 'I told you so's'.
This deal could herald the return of Abramovich to doing business in Russia, Vedomosti said.
As the Bible tells it, an angel appeared before the shepherds to herald the arrival of Jesus.
If he is right, digital technology may herald the death of film, but another rebirth of movies.
Dundee Sheriff Court heard that Mr Herald is accused of having "appropriated the sums of money without lawful authority".
Does this herald an era of equality and happiness for working parents?
Mr Llewellyn also questions the theory that building-society conversions will herald a wave of takeovers, leading to efficiency gains as overcapacity is cut.
It seems appropriate, therefore, to use an old Tinsel Town marketing line to herald the advent of a portentous strategic development: "They're Baaack!"
It might also herald an age of self-assembling furniture, said experts.
The Macy's Thanksgiving tradition began in 1924 when immigrant workers eager to celebrate their new American heritage held a public festival to herald the coming of Christmas.
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