Not exact matches
The Freedom Report's online archives only go back to 1999, but I was curious to see
older editions of
Paul's newsletters, in part because of a controversy dating to 1996, when Charles «Lefty» Morris, a Democrat running against
Paul for a House seat, released excerpts stating that «opinion polls consistently
show only about 5 % of blacks have sensible political opinions,» that «if you have ever been robbed by a black teen - aged male, you know how unbelievably fleet - footed they can be,» and that black representative Barbara Jordan is «the archetypical half - educated victimologist» whose «race and sex protect her from criticism.»
Paul then closes with several quotes from the
Old Testament which
shows how God's plan all along was to bless the Gentile people so that they might praise Him and glorify Him and sing His name (Rom 15:9 - 12).
Just as St.
Paul's letters gave early Christian commentators examples of how to interpret the
Old Testament in light of Christ, so the Church Fathers stretch our exegetical imagination by
showing how other passages can be read in that way.
It could probably be said that the letters of
Paul are not only intended to
show how Jesus fulfills the
Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah, but how Jesus also fulfills the Graeco - Roman expectations for what Caesar was supposed to be and do.
«That's definitely a possibility,» said 45 - year -
old Paul Wight, better known as the Big
Show.
As outlined in our new blog, numerous internationally respected studies make clear the importance of secure father - child attachment — including, for example, work by Dr
Paul Ramchandani of Imperial College London which
shows that «disengaged and remote father - child interactions as early as the third month of life» predict behaviour problems in children when they are
older [1] and US research
showing that «verbal exchanges between fathers and their infants and between mothers and their infants each, independently and uniquely, predict pre-schoolers» social competence and lower aggression» [2].
The
oldest mythologies dwell on cosmic and theistic issues, and
Paul Halpern
shows in The Cyclical Serpent that modern cosmology has much in common with the endless dance of Siva and the cult of Ouroboros, the self - eating serpent.
Among
older adults, additional research might
show that it is important to take supplements only if one has been documented to be folate - deficient,» said last author Ligi
Paul, Ph.D., nutrition scientist in the Vitamin Metabolism Laboratory at the HNRCA.
Steve Coogan and
Paul Rudd star as Erasmus and
Paul, a bickering gay couple whose life is turned inside out when a ten - year
old boy
shows up at their door claiming to be Erasmus» grandson.
: Miami basically plays like a longer, more raunchy episode of the
show, with some additional budget allotted for more explosions, gunfire, and a few star appearances from actors like
Paul Rudd (The OH in Ohio, The 40 - Year -
Old Virgin) and The Rock (Gridiron Gang).
In the film, a mysterious drifter named
Paul (Ethan Hawke, Sinister, The Purge) and his dog Abbie (who steals the
show in every single one of her scenes) make their way towards Mexico through the barren desert of the
old west.
There is a recurring gag that has
Paul Rudd doing his finest Tony Montana impression (it gets
old quick), a scene where the cops try to remove a beached whale from the shoreline, and a couple of run - ins with oft - appearing supporting performer on the TV
show, Nick Swardson (The Benchwarmers), as the flamboyantly gay Terry.
But a less familiar face became just as important to the
show over time, in the shape of Aaron
Paul's Jesse Pinkman, and the 32 - year -
old actor looks like he's on the verge of further big - screen success very soon.
From IMDb: «Steve Coogan and
Paul Rudd star as Erasmus and
Paul, a bickering gay couple whose life is turned inside out when a ten - year
old boy
shows up at their door claiming to be Erasmus» grandson.
Grandma / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter:
Paul Weitz)-- Self - described misanthrope Elle Reid has her protective bubble burst when her 18 - year -
old granddaughter, Sage,
shows up needing help.
(
Paul Reiser even
shows up as Slate's character's much -
older husband.)
Dennis reconnects with his
old accomplice and Therese's new lover, Rene (
Paul Rudd), a reformed safecracker who didn't
show up for the heist that got him busted.
However, as
Paul Peterson
shows (see «Ticket to Nowhere,» p. 39), long - term trend data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reveal only small increases in mathematics and science scores after 1982, when scores for 17 - year -
olds reached their nadir.
Scottish Ice & Snow Rally — Zoe Harrison reports on this event which turned out to be something of a misnomer / The 1922 Webb Super Nine — An account by Bryan Demaus of a little - known car briefly manufactured in Stourport - on - Severn / First of the Healeys — The Editor tells us how much he enjoyed driving the extremely rare 1947 Healey Westland / Three VSCC events — In his Diary of a dilettante Tom Threlfall records the action in Herefordshire and Wales and at Silverstone / 1931 Rambler Cross Country —
Paul Ponsel writes about his encounter with this early American five - passenger phaeton / Motoring magazines over the years — A brief survey by Michael Worthington - Williams of the many periodicals on motoring that have been published / 1929 Armstrong Siddeley — David Hawtin describes a fabric - bodied l5hp saloon that took eight years to restore / Paris Retromobile — Peter Russell went to France again this year to visit the popular
old - car
show / Two Mercedes 38/250 SS — The story of the 1929 cars owned and raced by Lord Howe and Sir Malcolm Campbell is told by A.F. Rivers Fletcher
«On Amazon.co.uk, self - published works regularly
show up in the top 100 bestselling books list, which this month includes The Girl Who Never Came Back by Amy Cross, a 30 - year -
old self - published writer of paranormal and fantasy, dystopia and erotica; and The One You Love by
Paul Pilkington, the first in his Emma Holden suspense mystery trilogy.
At the Muir Woods Earth Day volunteer event, 77 - year -
old Paul Gurian
shows the power of giving makes a soul strong — at any age By Mason Cummings
Paul McLean's solo exhibition «Code Duello,
Old Hick, & A Big Bang» brings the Brooklyn - based artist back to Nashville for the first time in over a decade with a complex, diverse
show touching on Andrew Jackson and his Indian Removal Act of 1830.
A painting from 1931
shows the piers in sunlight, with the sober realism of an
older American art but with visible brushwork and cube - like sheds out of
Paul Cézanne.
They are already worth visiting for
Paul Cole's literal exposure of his dirty linen: abstract - tending self portraits of sorts utilise his family's
old bedsheets as low value grounds which encourage guilt - free spontaneity and enable paint applied on both sides to contribute to the face
shown.
When invited to exhibit at the Armory
Show this past spring, the gallery featured a major sculpture by 30 - year -
old Paul Gabrieli that was snapped up in the first few minutes by filmmaker - turned - artist - and - tastemaker John Waters.
2010 3 minute wonder series, Broadcast commission, Channel 4 (27,28,29,30 Sept; 18, 19, 20, 21 Oct) 06.2010 Persistence of Vision, FACT, Liverpool, UK 05.2010 Steps into the arcane, Kunstmuseum Thurgau, Switzerland 05.2010 It has to be this way ², National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen [commissioned solo
show] 03.2010 Hands on, (curated by John Hilliard) Galerie Raum Mit Licht, Vienna, Austria 02.2010 Depatterrn, Galleri Erik Steen, Oslo, Norway 10.2009 Performance, Film Weekend: The Jarman Award at KunstHalle, Zurich, Switzerland 09.2009 Performance, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK06.2009 Mostravideo, Itau Cultural Institute, Sao Paulo, Brazil 02.2009 Altermodern, Fourth Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, UK 01.2009 It has to be this way, Matt's Gallery, London [commissiond solo
show] 12.2008 Performance, Event Horizon, Royal Academy of Art [commissioned solo
show] 06.2008 Performance, Happy Hand, British Film Institute, London, UK 10.2007 Cinemart, The Auditorium, Rome, Italy 09.2007 Foreign Bodies, White Box, New York, USA 07.2007 Swallowing Black Maria, Smart Project Space, Amsterdam [commissioned solo
show] 02.2007 The Believers, Touring
show to five cities in Norway, with performances in Stavanger, Forde and Bergen 09.2006 The truth was always there, The Collection, Lincoln [commissioned solo
show] 07.2006 UBS Opening, Tate Modern (with Laurie Simmons, Guerilla Girls etc), UK 05.2006 Performance, Human Camera, Mali Salon, Rijeka, Croatia (solo
show) 05.2006 I can't tell you, Grundy Gallery, Blackpool [commissioned solo
show] 04.2006 Metropolis Rise, CQL Design Centre, Shanghai; DIAF 2006 @ 798 Space, Beijing, China 04.2006 Performance, Inside, Great Eastern Hotel, Masonic Temple, London, UK 03.2006 Performance, Don't Look Through Me, Y Theatre, Leicester, UK 03.2006 Don't look through me, City Gallery Leicester [commissioned solo
show] 03.2006 Performance, Screening at Witte de With / Tent, Rotterdam, Holland 03.2006 John Skies or Sally Swims, UKS Gallery, Oslo, Norway 02.2006 Wandering Rocks, Gimpel Fils Gallery, London 11.2005 Image in Me, Market Gallery, Glasgow (solo
show) 10.2005 Eyes of Others, Gallery of Photography, Dublin [commissioned solo
show] 10.2005 Wunderkammer, The Collection (curated by Edward Allington), Lincoln, UK 09.2005 I saw the light, Gasworks Gallery, London [commissioned solo
show] 09.2004 Adam, Smart Projects, Amsterdam, Holland 11.2004 Mind the Gap, La Friche, Triangle, Marseille, France 08.2004 Shattered Love, Keith Talent Gallery, London 04.2004 Eating at Another's Table, Metropole Galleries, Folkestone (performance / exhibition) 04.2004 Tonight, Studio Voltaire, London (curated by
Paul O'Neill) 03.2004 Performance, A Variety Night of Ventriloquism, FACT, Liverpool (with Ken Campbell, Aura Satz, Andrew Hubbard) 03.2004 Mesmer, Temporarycontemporary, London 02.2004 Haunted Media, Site Gallery, Sheffield (with Susan Hiller, Susan Collins, Scanner, Thompson / Craighead, S Mark Gubb) 09.2003 The Physical World, APT, London, (with Ian Dawson, Katie Pratt) 09.2003 Sphere, Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, Canada (with
Paul McCarthy, Bruce Nauman, Laurie Simmons and Allan McCollum) 09.2003 You said that without moving your lips, Limerick City Gallery, Ireland (solo
show) 08.2003 Calidoscopio, Museo del Barro, Asuncion, Paraguay (solo
show) 04.2003 A Taste for Sham, Studio 1.1, London (with Jo Bruton, Kirsten Glass) 01.2003 The Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, The Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle (curated by Brian Griffiths) 09.2002 History Revision, Plymouth Arts Centre (including Terry Atkinson) 06.2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, London Print Studio 04.2002 Dramatic Events, Kent Institute of Art and Design 03.2002 Photoscoptocus, Camden Lock / Henley - on - Thames (Public commission) 03.2002 Nausea, Djangoly Art Centre (with Dave Burrows, Beagles and Ramsay, Margarita Gluzberg, Mark Hutchinson) 08.2001 Trinity College, Zwemmer Gallery, London 05.2001 Black Bag,
Old Operating Theatre Museum (+ monograph BBC programme, «Lindsay Seers, Artist's Eye», Rory Logsdail) 03.2001 For the dead travel fast, Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery [commissioned solo
show] 02.2001 Molotov, Dilston Grove Gallery, London (with Kirsten Glass, Diann Bauer, Annie Whiles, Helen Paterson, Lisa Fielding Smith) 09.2000 Tow, Camden Lock, Millennium Commission Project (with Tim Head, Diana Edmunds, Janice Howard, Zoe Brown) 10.2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London 07.2000 A Shot In The Head, Lisson Gallery, London 07.2000 Unfound, Chisenhale Gallery, London 06.2000 City Projects, Artomatic, London (with Jemima Brown, Marcel Price) 05.2000 The Double, The Lowry Centre, Salford (with Thomas Ruff, James Reilly and Alice Maher) 05.2000 On the rock, APT Gallery, London (with Annie Whiles, Diann Bauer, Kirsten Glass, Helen Paterson) 09.1999 Nerve, ICA, London (with Jeremy Deller, Martin Creed, Dave Beech, John Isaacs, John Beagles, Dave Burrows, Clive Sall) 07.1999 Quotidian, Paper Bag Factory (curated by Julia Lancaster) 06.1999 Autocannibal, Laure Genillard Gallery, London (solo
show) 04.1999 Cabin Fever, Gallery Herold Bremen, Germany, (with Caroline Macarthy and Mairead Maclean) 10.1998 Multiples, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 09.1998 Cannibal,
Old Museum Art Centre, Belfast (solo
show) 08.1997 Knock, Knock, Artists Work Programme, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin 11.1996 Stick Your Hands Up, Acorn Storage, Hammersmith, London 10.1996 Ghost, ACAVA Open Studios, Denmark St, London 09.1996 Ad Hoc, London Artforms.
Buchanan brought in blockbuster
shows — among them «Picasso,» «The Fashion World of Jean
Paul Gaultier,» and this year's «Girl with a Pearl Earring» — that attracted huge crowds to the new de Young, which opened in 2005, five years after the
older, earthquake - damaged building closed.
The 87 - year -
old artist, who received a scholarship to the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 1949 and has since summered in Maine for years, has donated 800 - plus works to the school over the years, which are
shown intermittently in the Max Gordon - designed
Paul J. Schupf Wing for the Works of Alex Katz.
Here are some photos of the group
show at Lazarides (Newcastle) that has been running concurrently with the Candice Tripp
show. Although, some of the work is
old, there still were some interesting pieces including this
older style Faile box. Other artists included Blu, Bast, Lucy Mclauchlan, Mode2, Antonio Diaz, JR, David Choe, Jonathan Yeo, Stanley Donwood, Kelsey Brookes, Micallef,
Paul Insect, Conor Harrington, and 3D (Robert Del Naja)
In an earlier post, I objected to the absence of women in «Process / Abstraction,» a group
show at
Paul Kasmin that mixes younger artists with
old - timers like Frank Stella, Andy Warhol, and Kenneth Noland.
n another unfortunate coincidence, Amanda Ross - Ho's sculptures suffer from comparison with the powerful
Paul Thek
show at the Whitney (work which is over 20 years
old).
Run by Megan Piper, it
shows those with careers of 40 years or more: Tess Jaray,
Paul de Monchaux... not too late to teach new dogs
old tricks.
His most recent
shows include Telepathic Improvisation, a multi-partnered project that marks the first US solo exhibition for the collaborative duo Pauline Boudry / Renate Lorenz, which he co-curated at CAMH with Alhena Katsof; Atlas, Plural, Monumental, a 25 - year survey of sculpture, video and photography, drawing, and interactive artwork by the inimitable
Paul Ramírez Jonas; A Traveling
Show, in which individual artworks and the display of a decade -
old visual correspondence project between Matt Keegan and Kay Rosen spoke to a long - standing friendship and shared interests in humor and language; and THE INTERVIEW: Red, Red Future — a solo exhibition of commissioned works by the artist MPA that traveled to the Whitney Museum of American Art — in which a live performance and sculptures became vehicles through which to imagine the future of the red planet and notions of colonization.
AM attended the opening of Mark Ryden's latest series of work «The Gay 90's:
Old Tyme Art
Show» at
Paul Kasmin Gallery (previewed).
It is an incredible
show of artworks made from recycled materials, Susie MacMurray making a dress from rubber gloves,
Paul Villinski making butterflies out of
old records, Do Ho Suh making a jacket out of dog tags.
This latest video is no exception, as
Paul shows us how to turn
old t - shirts into highly effective fire lighters.
Because juvenile drivers commonly incur traffic violations relative to
older drivers, by
showing your insurance carrier that you are committed to safe driving, you may be able to obtain lower insurance premiums as a result of your participation in a North St.
Paul Minnesota online traffic school.
Because juvenile drivers commonly incur traffic violations relative to
older drivers, by
showing your insurance carrier that you are committed to safe driving, you may be able to obtain lower insurance premiums as a result of your participation in a West St
Paul Minnesota online traffic school.
A lot of things happened this week in the world of The Verge, and we have some first - hand experience to share.This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and
Paul, welcome science reporter Loren Grush back to the
show to tell us what it was like to watch SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket launch in person, as well as meeting SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.Also, Dieter got an exclusive look at Intel's new smart glasses, and Nilay reviewed Apple's HomePod, so they share their experiences with the technology and discuss what it means for the rest of the market.There's a lot more in between that — like
Paul's weekly segment «USB - C - crets» (I think that's how you spell it)-- so listen to it all, and you'll get it all.02: 17 - Intel made smart glasses that look normal20: 40 - Apple HomePod review44: 28 - SpaceX's Falcon Heavy launch with Loren Grush1: 07:57 -
Paul's weekly segment «USB - C - crets» 1:11:44 - The Uber - Waymo trial: greed, ambition, and robot cars1: 15:01 - Inside the desperate fight to keep
old TVs alive
A week after
Paul's December 31 video
showing the body of someone who had apparently taken their own life in Aokigahara, also known as Japan's «suicide forest,» and a day after YouTube finally responded with a statement of its own on the incident, the Google - owned company has moved to reduce ties with the 22 - year -
old vlogger.