We're
talking moving a wall by 100 mm.
Not exact matches
Our foreign and economic ministers were blindsided by Mr. Trump's signing of executive orders to
move ahead with building a
wall and adopting anti-immigrant policies on the same day the ministers arrived in Washington, where they faced a very inauspicious atmosphere for
talks.
Otherwise, you
moved very slowly, which meant you had time to look around and see the tired faces: the many mothers and fathers lining the
walls, nursing babies, charging phones, calming a child in meltdown or rousing a child from the despair of just learning he has to go with his parents to another
talk.
I think it's something Brooks has been harping on in a lot of those bad losses...
talking about «we have to share the ball» «we have to pass and
move» «we have to play tough defense consistently» «we have to stop looking for personal stats» if
wall felt it was on him and was the leader he would say say «I have to...»
And there was an excellent article in the
Wall Street Journal which I point to in my trend roundup,
talking about what the shift might mean, how publishers are changing their marketing strategies to make sure that when people are looking at their mobile device and come across a new book, they have ways to immediately access that book and read it while they're on their commute or whatever it is that they're doing on the
move.
Tony Oursler, though, a Modern pioneer, projects
talking heads on faceless dolls and blinking eyes on
walls, and places
moving images in the most unlikely, inventive and, sometimes, creepy of places.