Sentences with phrase «way in a crowd of people»

Not exact matches

Nothing I did for the rest of the trip was nearly as difficult — not hooking up or draining the waste tanks, not fixing a bad connection on the water hose, not even pulling into a crowded gas station (the thing about having a really big car towing a really big, shiny trailer is that people tend to see you, and maybe take pity, and certainly get out of your way)-- and nothing left me with such a giddy glow in the aftermath, even after I learned I'd pulled in a little bit catawampus, and our trailer listed slightly to the left.
I found myself in a crowd that seemed to be made up of at least half a million people, crushed between the walls on either side of the road as they made their way to the Church of the Black Virgin.
One way is to urge people to become a character in the story: You are on the edge of a crowd listening to Jesus.
When you're leading worship in front of a crowd, how do you experience God in such a rich and authentic way each time, and how do you draw people in?
Few people are more in love with the Star Wars way of doing things than J.J. Abrams, who has fashioned an entire career out of crafting old - fashioned crowd pleasers.
Free food is one of the most reliable ways to draw a crowd, so by offering healthy foods and giving people a risk - free opportunity to try them, people turn out in droves, and open their minds to new, nutritious ingredients in the process.
I wish there can be a way of reaching this man and letting him know that the crowd behind him now were the same set of people who were behind Fayemi when he was governor; these are any government in power people.
Ioannis Karamouzas of the University of Minnesota and his colleagues analyzed video footage of crowds in both an outdoor campus and an indoor bottleneck setting, and found that people interact in a consistent and universal way if their «time until a possible collision» is taken into account.
This way, you can have some backup and «crowd out» some of the negativity by focusing on the other people in the group.
So this whole day I devoted to Christmas shopping and though I had to practically fight my way through crowds of people in the streets of London, I got a little into that Christmas spirit which to me is pretty equal to stress, in a good way though.
The trick is to wear these pieces in a different way, or around a different crowd of people.
Though true bisexuality truly exists, in the crowds of the young teenage and young people it often can be the easy way to attract attention much more than prefer dating or being with opposite sex.
The Way Way Back may occasionally waver in terms of credibility and originality, but that doesn't stop it from being a modest crowd - pleasing film for those viewers just looking for some quality laughs and bittersweet, heart - felt moments of people who find their own path, however awkwardly, that resonate.
The point is eloquently made in the film's pre-credit sequence, where the camera zigzags its way through a crowd of people, stopping at random people as a faceless narrator ruminates on how the questions and so - called answers in life are perhaps one and the same.
They include Emily Callahan and Amber Jackson, who are using their skills and intellect to turn oil rigs into coral reefs; Nate Parker, the activist filmmaker, writer, humanitarian and director of The Birth of a Nation; Scott Harrison, the founder of Charity Water, whose projects are delivering clean water to over 6 million people; Anthony D. Romero, the executive director of the ACLU, who has dedicated his life to protecting the liberties of Americans; Louise Psihoyos, the award - winning filmmaker and executive director of the Oceanic Preservation Society; Jennifer Jacquet, an environmental social scientist who focuses on large - scale cooperation dilemmas and is the author of «Is Shame Necessary»; Brent Stapelkamp, whose work promotes ways to mitigate the conflict between lions and livestock owners and who is the last researcher to have tracked famed Cecil the Lion; Fabio Zaffagnini, creator of Rockin» 1000, co-founder of Trail Me Up, and an expert in crowd funding and social innovation; Alan Eustace, who worked with the StratEx team responsible for the highest exit altitude skydive; Renaud Laplanche, founder and CEO of the Lending Club — the world's largest online credit marketplace working to make loans more affordable and returns more solid; the Suskind Family, who developed the «affinity therapy» that's showing broad success in addressing the core social communication deficits of autism; Jenna Arnold and Greg Segal, whose goal is to flip supply and demand for organ transplants and build the country's first central organ donor registry, creating more culturally relevant ways for people to share their donor wishes; Adam Foss, founder of SCDAO, a reading project designed to bridge the achievement gap of area elementary school students, Hilde Kate Lysiak (age 9) and sister Isabel Rose (age 12), Publishers of the Orange Street News that has received widespread acclaim for its reporting, and Max Kenner, the man responsible for the Bard Prison Initiative which enrolls incarcerated individuals in academic programs culminating ultimately in college degrees.
; Scott Harrison, the founder of Charity Water, whose projects are delivering clean water to over 6 million people; Anthony D. Romero, the executive director of the ACLU, who has dedicated his life to protecting the liberties of Americans; Louise Psihoyos, the award - winning filmmaker and executive director of the Oceanic Preservation Society; Jennifer Jacquet, an environmental social scientist who focuses on large - scale cooperation dilemmas and is the author of «Is Shame Necessary»; Brent Stapelkamp, whose work promotes ways to mitigate the conflict between lions and livestock owners and who is the last researcher to have tracked famed Cecil the Lion; Fabio Zaffagnini, creator of Rockin» 1000, co-founder of Trail Me Up, and an expert in crowd funding and social innovation; Alan Eustace, who worked with the StratEx team responsible for the highest exit altitude skydive; Renaud Laplanche, founder and CEO of the Lending Club — the world's largest online credit marketplace working to make loans more affordable and returns more solid; the Suskind Family, who developed the «affinity therapy» that's showing broad success in addressing the core social communication deficits of autism; Jenna Arnold and Greg Segal, whose goal is to flip supply and demand for organ transplants and build the country's first central organ donor registry, creating more culturally relevant ways for people to share their donor wishes; Adam Foss, founder of SCDAO, a reading project designed to bridge the achievement gap of area elementary school students, Hilde Kate Lysiak (age 9) and sister Isabel Rose (age 12), Publishers of the Orange Street News that has received widespread acclaim for its reporting, and Max Kenner, the man responsible for the Bard Prison Initiative which enrolls incarcerated individuals in academic programs culminating ultimately in college degrees.
Standing up in front of a crowd of people who love poetry and reading a poem to them might be a little unnerving for shy poets, but it's a smart way to attract the attention of potential book buyers.
And I can be in a crowd of people and still feel that way.
And what's so sad is that tons of people are trapped in that way of thinking because the medias always show us the one lucky guy in the crowd who has succeeded in making quick money!
There, a group of seven or so people — always including Messrs. Tropin and Pertusi — discusses all aspects of risk: market risks, risks in individual traders» portfolios and how they have changed since the day before, risks to the way the firm is investing its cash, counterparty risk — or risk that the firm on another side of a trade will fail, even evaluations of whether traders» are in positions that are «crowded» with other hedge funds.
Though weather problems have reduced its numbers this year, the HSSTT's «Pets with Wings» program has flown hundreds of adoptable dogs to the U.S. Various fostering approaches have been tried as ways to relieve shelter crowding, and Vasconcellos ticks off the numerous ways the shelter is publicized to residents and tourists alike: in person, in publications and videos and online.
- Meeting new people of all types, including children, men, crowds, people wearing hats, in wheelchairs, etc. - Meeting new dogs (do not bring your pup to areas with lots of dogs until after 4 months)- Exposure to other pets such as cats, horse, birds - Teach him to enjoy his crate - Riding in the car (be sure to restrain him using a crate or seatbelt for safety)- Being held, touched all over and in different ways, being bathed and groomed - Visiting the Vet's office, groomer, daycare, boarding kennel - Exposure to loud noises and strange objects (example — umbrella opening)- Exposure to traffic, motorcycles, bicycles, skateboards, joggers - Getting him used to being left alone for a few hours at a time
On my way to a recent flight, while I was frantically putting my shoes back on among a pushy crowd in that tiny space past the scanning machine, my mind began to wander from its immediate train of thought (which, at that moment, included a fantasy involving my shoe coming into contact with the person's head behind me) to one that was slightly more peaceful and productive: How can the process of flying be improved outside of the plane?
Not even just in the sense that you'll be amongst throngs of crowds and people will get in the way of your pictures — you literally may not even find a spot to park.
Local multiplayer follows the rest of the package in harking back to the glory days of the console FPS, a time when people crowded round consoles and accused one another of watching their screens rather than caring about Killstreaks and Perks (though online multiplayer goes the other way, following the COD Train with experience points and unlocks at each rank).
Across the way, crowds of people whoop and holler, each of them hoping to win swag they can stuff in their floor - length swag bags.
Ether One is a peculiar game in many ways — it at once stands out in the crowd, but is also part of a wave of non-violent first person games, seemingly following in line with The Stanley Parable and Gone Home, two games which expertly present new ideas on game design and storytelling (allowing gamers to break a narrative, and highlight the importance of contextual stories).
Select past exhibitions include Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie (2017), a city - wide exhibition featuring works by more than 50 artists in the Roberts Gallery, in street interventions throughout Philadelphia, and on the web; Nari Ward: Sun Splashed (2016), a mid-career survey of the artist's found - object assemblage art; Picasso: The Great War, Experimentation and Change (2016), which examined the artist's stylistic development during the First World War; and Mark Dion, Judy Pfaff, Fred Wilson: The Order of Things (2015), for which the Barnes commissioned three large - scale artist installations in response to the unconventional way Dr. Barnes displayed his collection.
I have to agree, based on observation that the most creative people I know are ugly or socially disfunctional in some way (and thus probably experience a lot of involuntary time away from crowds, joy, companionship, comfort) and create as a way to escape that.
While works such as Group I, 1951 (Tate Gallery T02226) were concerned with crowds of people in public spaces, others like Bicentric Form, 1949 (Tate Gallery N05932) dealt with more intimate exchanges by the fusion of bodies in a way that anticipated the comparable painting Two Figures (Tate Gallery T03155).
Pope.L's «The Great White Way, 22 miles, 9 years, 1 street (Whitney version),» 2001, which will be on view in the Barnes Foundation's «Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie.»
They warn of inevitable hard knocks to come, even as ever more people crowd into harm's way, whether in the instant pop - up shanty towns of cities sitting on unstable faults or the spreading sprawl of the Southwest, where megadrought may have been the norm, and 20th - century moisture the anomaly.
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In almost every Canadian airport we saw crowds of shiny, happy people who were either on their way to or just back from a hot destination.
With thousands of young people in the UK and overseas applying for graduate jobs, the tests provide a statistical way to see who is up to the mark and who stands out from the crowd.
But in the job market, where people should instead try to stand out from the crowd by their accomplishments and abilities, why give way to the chance of being judged based on one's race or looks?
heres another bad review for the dreaming summit elementary school i have 2 kids that go there it very crowded and unorganized u cant just drop your kids off in front of the school in the morning its to crowded u have to park way in the back and take a 5 minute walk around the school to get them to the playground then when u try to pick your kids up after school it takes u 10 minutes to find your kids cause there just every where no organization the parents there are very stuck up think there better than everyone else cause they have a lil bit of money and live in dreaming summit my wife is a teacher she said she would never teach at a school like that parents are ungrateful and im not to fond of the front office people they seem like they do nt care
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