Not exact matches
With his profound snapshots on sentiment, social psychology, behavioral finance, game theory, macroeconomics, and more, Jared
gets readers thinking about the markets and trade
ideas in a
bold new way.
John Law, a Scottish adventurer, gambler and convicted murderer,
got the ear of the new young king's Regent and protector (Philippe d'Orleans) with a
bold idea.
Bold and decisive Carrie came up and sang with our band at a smokey sober club, and I
got this
idea you see....
The feelings that my body was dirty, that it was not mine, that it was only for someone else to use, to decide if I was pretty, too fat, too thin, too plain, too made - up, too shy, too
bold, too accepting, too melodramatic, too obedient, too defiant... you
get the
idea, that all never went away, I was just lacking explanation for much of it for a long time.
The fact that these
bold ideas did not
get greater coverage in the media was largely due to the fact that its launch was trumped by Labour's Lord Levy and the cash for honours scandal.
And that conservatism, he says, feeds on itself: «The message has
gotten through not to include
bold or novel
ideas in applications,» he says.
This week I'm all about playing catch up and
getting ahead — a
bold word for a Monday, but I'm feeling extra motivated and inspired to hammer out some of the
ideas that have been brewing in my head.
I'm stepping out of my comfort zone and going for a
bold print pant and I've styled them for you 4 different ways, so you can
get an
idea of how versatile they can be.
Now if you want something fancier or do not like the washers
idea, try using another shade of ribbon -LCB- something bright like fuchsia or neon would look great -RCB- and changing the washers to a
bold chain which you can
get in a hobby store.
With Efraim as the leader and motivating force in a
bold strike of entrepreneurship, they
get the
idea to go for the crumbs and not the pie.
As Brennan told her audience at the Harvard Graduate School of Education's
Bold Ideas & Critical Conversations event on September 19, the challenge of «
getting unstuck» is something she thinks about a lot.
Also tucked in the recommendations are such
bold ideas as serious acceptance of alternative pathways and «residency» - style preparation; insistence on real standards for entering prep programs and
getting certified; the demand that prep programs respond to K — 12 education's actual supply - demand numbers rather than enrolling as many people as possible (thus probably killing the proverbial ed - school «cash cow» within universities); and tracking the performance of those emerging from various prep programs and institutions — and actually closing those that don't produce successful professionals.
In the first round of Race to the Top, she said, «you saw a lot of states... put out quote «
bold»
ideas, but when it came time to
get local community buy - in, it kind of fell apart.»
But, I want to stay open to hearing about
bold options and
ideas to
get to excellence in all of our schools.
Maybe now that the
Bold is just around the corner it might be a good
idea for some Curve owners to add some additional life to their device by
getting a different housing scheme..
So in general,
bolder ideas don't
get through the process unless they originate at the top.
I don't
get the feeling the task force much likes the
idea, and I can't see the law society taking such a
bold and irreversible step — not yet, anyway.