Sentences with phrase «heady early days»

Ask Scott D. Anthony, author of The First Mile: A Launch Manual for Getting Great Ideas Into the Market, and he'll tell you that the heady early days — when an innovation moves from idea to market — are the toughest time for any startup.
In the heady early days of the Church, Peter and John were once again arrested for preaching Christ and His resurrection.
In the heady early days of the Church, Peter and John were once again arrested for preaching Christ and his resurrection.
In the heady early days of the last Labour government, the 1997 white paper Excellence in Schools stated:
Drawn from multiple sources, the film captures the visceral thrill of the heady early days of a culture - changing phenomenon in the making — and the way it both pulled a group of young revolutionaries together and then split them apart.
Heineman was there to capture the heady early days of this movement.
From her youth as the belle of Montgomery to the heady early days of marriage to the inevitable breakdowns, Fowler chronicles Zelda's incredible life with sympathy and compassion.
It is testament to the heady early days of the rising overseas demand for contemporary Chinese art that in 1993, two years after graduating from the printmaking department of Beijing's Central Academy of Fine Arts at age 27, Feng was invited by the director of the 45th Venice Biennale, Achille Bonito Oliva, to exhibit his paintings in the Biennale's «Aperto» exhibition of international emerging artists.
I did a quick sift for articles on oil and related subjects in The New York Times archives back through 1851 and found a few fun snippets providing a window on those heady early days, when folks got rich pumping 15 - cent - a-barrel oil:
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