Sentences with phrase «on flypaper»

Handling is like driving on flypaper, but when the Viper's rear end finally does break loose, it does so with more warning, less drama than it used to, thanks in part to the Michelin Pilot Sport PS2 radials.
This post originally appeared in a slightly different form in U.S. News & World Report and then appeared on Flypaper.
Finally, without any institutional bias intended, my nomination for the best prediction of 2011 was from our own Mike Petrilli, who wrote on Flypaper that Cathie Black would be gone by April (she was actually gone by February).
This article appeared on Flypaper and originally appeared in a slightly different form in Education Week.
This post originally appeared on Flypaper.
Update: As Eric Osberg pointed out on Flypaper yesterday, Jonathan Gyurko raised some of these same concerns too.
As I wrote on Flypaper, I'm very disappointed with the Department's decision to name 16 states RTT finalists.
This post first appeared on Flypaper.
Andy posted «another indictment of «turnarounds»» on Flypaper just last March, quoting from a Tom Loveless Brookings study:
This first appeared on Flypaper.
Editor's note: This first appeared on Flypaper.
This post has appeared on Flypaper and originally appeared in a slightly different form on the TNTP Blog.
This article was originally published in a slightly different form on the C - Sail blog and later appeared on Flypaper.
This blog entry also appears on Flypaper.
This appeared earlier on Flypaper.
This post appeared earlier on Flypaper, and originally appeared in a slightly different form at U.S. News & World Report.

Not exact matches

In Oruro, Bolivia, Cougar safety Scott Peterson was lying diagonally on his undersized bed under flypaper spattered with casualties, listening to the Armed Forces Radio broadcast of the game and biting back the black wish that his teammates not win it all without him.
They lack solid surfaces on which to land, plus their fearsome gravity and thick clouds of ammonium compounds would make departure a task akin to that of an insect struggling free from a piece of flypaper.
Syndecans are a family of proteins on the surface of cells that act as molecular «flypaper,» helping proteins attach to cells and also helping cells attach to one another.
John's initially passive observations blur into a frenetic, subjective tailspin of delusions and inebriated anxiety; his pretty - boy appearance grows grimy, his white clothes assume the soiled hue of flypaper yellow, and arid grit gets plastered to every surface, caked on every sweaty face.
This first appeared on the Fordham Institute's Flypaper blog.
It first appeared on the Fordham Institute's Flypaper blog.
This post originally appeared on the Fordham Institute's Flypaper blog.
* Note that I've tweaked my calculus since this article was first published on Fordham's Flypaper blog on Monday, partly because of feedback from House Republicans.
Like Mike Petrilli in this Flypaper post, I hope Alexander's and Kline's annual testing one - eighty is all just a bluff to try and get Democrats to give in on requiring states to develop teacher evaluations.
This first appeared on the Fordham Institute's Flypaper blog, in response to this piece, which was a response to this piece.
Michael Brickman is the national policy director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, where he is a commentator on education - reform issues and a regular contributor to the Flypaper blog and other publications.
Stephen Parker, who leads the Education and Workforce Committee at the National Governor's Association, shared a list of solutions for state leaders as they implement their ESSA plans, in a new post on the Fordham Institute's Flypaper blog.
Here, though, the entry speed is high, but rather than protest with even the smallest of wiggles or an understeering push, the 911 simply digs in and hangs on all the way through as if its wheels are wrapped in flypaper rather than rubber.
The Evo's flypaper grip on tarmac, snow and gravel continues with two trim levels and sprint times that are as low as 4.5 seconds to 60 mph.
Is it then «flypaper» on view?
In 1955, he co-authored The Sweet Flypaper of Life with Langston Hughes focusing his lens on illustrating the human qualities of African American life in Harlem.
When Roy DeCarava set out in mid-twentieth century Harlem to undertake what would become the landmark photobook The Sweet Flypaper of Life (1955), he employed photography as «a creative expression to meditate on everyday life and family,» says Drew Sawyer, head of exhibitions and curator of photography at the Columbus Museum of Art.
Hughes collaborated with a number of visual artists including Mexican painter Miguel Covarrubias, who illustrated «The Weary Blues,» Hughes's first books, a collection of poems published in 1926; photographer Roy DeCarava on «The Sweet Flypaper of Life»; German - American artist Winold Reiss; and artist Aaron Douglas, his friend and Harlem Renaissance peer.
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