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These issues are coming to the fore in a number of recently announced buyouts.
Seemingly doctored spectra came to the fore in a paper from Organic Letters.
The announcement brought social issues to the fore in a campaign that to date has focused on economic concerns.
(Her unease comes to the fore in a deftly crafted, albeit undeveloped, moment with her roommate, who's also a waitress).
It has brought the difficult issue of emotional abuse to the fore in a way that has encouraged national discussion.
Here, Rohmer's politics — his visionary, romantic conservatism — come to the fore in a story that pits a rural schoolteacher against France's progressive, Socialist bureaucracy.
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His talent with the bat came to the fore in an innings of 148 runs against Pakistan in his fifth international match.
It's only natural that the two biggest cities, both with strong football heartlands, should also constantly be at the fore in the A-League.
On Sunday night in Kharkiv, Portugal finally dazzled as their nation expects, with Cristiano Ronaldo to the fore in an impressive 2-1 win over the Netherlands.
Last week, all of those questions came to the fore in an unusually public exchange of acrimony between Israel and the United States.
It is more deeply concerned with the facts on the ground, namely how the baser instincts of human beings inevitably come to the fore in an atmosphere tense with the threat of violence.
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