But long - term impact is not
the only economic story to be told about early childhood education.
Not exact matches
This is essentially the
story of QE, which not
only failed to bring about
economic recovery, but also failed to stop asset prices from falling well into 2003.»
This
story illustrates that the world in which we live also lives in us; not
only are we a part of cultures, sub-cultures, socio - politico -
economic groups, families and other institutions, they are a part of us, constitutive of our very selfhood.
But the challenges arising from trade flows are
only part of the
story that will confront
economic policy - makers during the Asian Century.
Based on short
stories from the 2009 collection «Both Ways Is the
Only Way I Want It» by American writer Maile Meloy, Reichardt's latest feature, Certain Women, displays the struggle for connection of three women whose loneliness mirrors the
economic and spiritual malaise gripping a part of 21st century America.
Other films that we admire, but didn't quite make the cut included Alison Mclean «s «Jesus» Son» featuring awesome performances by Billy Crudup and Samatha Morton as drug - addict adult - lescents in the 1970s, Stephen Daldry «s celebratory boyhood - meets - ballet drama, «Billy Elliot,» Lars Von Trier's comedic docu - like dogme film «Idioterne» («The Idiots,» made in 1998 but
only released in the U.S. in 2000), Steven Soderbergh «s
economic and no - nonsense «Erin Brockovich,» Stephen Frears «manchild, record store - centered love
story, «High Fidelity,» Terence Davies ««The House of Mirth» featuring an excellent Gillian Anderson turn, and perhaps Neil LaBute «s best film, tellingly one he didn't write, the dreamy and odd, «Nurse Betty.»
I would also say flash fiction is related to poetry, but
only when it comes to the
economic use of the most effective words and by creating impressions in the mind of the reader, forcing the reader to «sense» the
story.
A gripping narrative of the infamous hunt which drove the buffalo population to near extinction — the
story of a moment in our history in which mass destruction of an animal population was seen as the
only route to
economic solvency.
Now, with US National home prices back at the level they were in the Fall of 2003, the magazine is at it again putting the housing market on the cover (thanks to Thicken My Wallet for alerting us to the
story),
only this TIME the caption reads «Rethinking Homeownership: Why owning a home may no longer make
economic sense».
While more personal, these are no less political than previously; in his art, Dial's own
story is always
only part of a larger history, spanning the Jim Crow era in the South and the Civil Rights movement through such phenomena as the
economic globalization and Great Recession of the 21st century, which have disproportionately affected African - Americans.
But this
story is
only partly about turtles; it's just as much about the indigenous owners of the Arnavons, and how they put aside past differences and
economic gain to protect the Arnavons rookery when it was down for the count.