Sentences with phrase «sense than our crowd»

Even though I disagree with President Bush on philosophy he still makes a lot more sense than our crowd of do - good regulars.

Not exact matches

Reid makes sense, but I would really like for another one of our secondary players to get a chance to try safety rather than add another player to an already crowded secondary.
By the time these two horses reached the grandstand, the jam - packed crowd of more than 53,000 sensed that a nerve - twanging horse race was in the making.
In a sense the shocking breakdown of Go for Wand in the 1990 Breeders» Cup Distaff at Belmont, as she and Bayakoa went hammer and tongs 100 yards from the wire, poisoned the well even more deeply than Ruffian's demise, since Go for Wand went down deep in the stretch, in full view of everyone, and then tried to stand on a foot that flapped around grotesquely as she bounded in a panic in front of the horrified crowds that filled the grandstand.
However, the Sassy Inspires the Senses stands out from the crowd because it is more than a baby jumper, it is a baby activity centre.
Leigh, meanwhile, explores Turner's life unburdened by any sense of purpose other than an intense, contagious fascination with this man, his work and, increasingly, the inevitable, slow, irresistible trudge towards death.We observe Turner's fondness for his elderly father; his sexual relationship with his meek housekeeper (Dorothy Atkinson); his rejection of his children and their mother; his arms - length acceptance by the lions of the Royal Academy; his late - life relationship with a Margate widow (Marion Bailey); and the mockery of the crowd when his work turns experimental.
PARK SENSE FRONT - PARK - ASSIST SYSTEM Most people would rather wrestle A.J. Styles than park a full - size pickup in a crowded mall parking lot.
Maybe it makes sense for the Arts and Leisure section, which targets more of a national audience than daily critics, to worry about crowd pleasing.
In a poem written to a friend about the habit people had of following the crowd rather than thinking for themselves Albers once wrote: «Everyone senses his place through his neighbor.»
Predictably, it was impossible to get a real sense of the art, not because of the overwhelming crowds or the scope of the exhibition but rather the zigzagging circulation of the opening promenade is more about scoping fellow visitors than whatever was on display behind them.
But if you believe what he believes, you ought to reach the conclusions he reaches, because they make a lot more sense than the ones the usual anti-climatology crowd comes up with.
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