Sentences with phrase «influence of a new breed»

If there is a clear sign of the growing influence of a new breed of national education advocacy organizations, it surely lies in their entry into state - level politics.

Not exact matches

Meet a whole new breed of digitally connected consumers and prepare to have your theories about how they buy, where they shop, and who really influences their buying decisions completely re-written.
In this study, Badás and her research team wanted to test whether difficulties encountered by the blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus) during the breeding season might influence the precise intensity of the new blue, white and yellow feathers growing once these birds have moulted.
Survive betrays the absence of Kojima's intense creative influence, resulting in a curious half - breed that resembles the Metal Gear stealth template but wants to be something new.
However dogs became partners to man, the dispersal of dog breeds, the development of new breeds, and the extinction of others was influenced by war, nomadic tribes, trade routes, pastoral communities, and the spread of civilization.
But it can influence how easy it is to find a healthy, reasonably priced puppy as well as the quantity of breed - specific care and training information available as you and your puppy start your new life together.
The A.K.C. and its members are active in Washington and in state politics, spending thousands of dollars in campaign donations and influencing efforts including specific caps on the numbers of litters kennels could breed, and some codifications of minimal living standards and the use of tethers, including efforts in Oregon, North Carolina, Georgia, New York, New Hampshire and California.
Three researchers from the University of Bristol, the City University of New York, and Western Carolina University recently conducted a study titled, «Dog Movie Stars and Dog Breed Popularity: A Case Study in Media Influence on Choice.»
If I had to pick somebody who might find his way into the short list of the curators deciding on who gets the prize at Texas Contemporary, I might cast my vote for Lora Reynolds Gallery artist Colby Bird, who has a show of his new work, House Lamps, up through October 18th at Texas State University gallery (see this link), and appears to be moving a little closer to Robert Gober, an influence that might appear natural to those who know that his earlier work, Dust Breeds Contempt, paid homage to a photograph by Man Ray that followed the accumulation of dust on Duchamp's The Large Glass.
His presidency has changed the rules of influence in the nation's capital — and spawned a new breed of lobbyist on K Street.
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