Sentences with phrase «who came of ages»

Anyone who came of ages in the decade will remember it well.
The result is that this third generation, now moving into the ranks of power in North Korea, has a greater understanding and interaction with the West compared to their parents, who came of age at the height of the Cold War.
Part of the reason for Budweiser's decline is that the beer has failed to capture millennials in the same way it won over Gen X-ers who came of age in the»80s.
Second, as counterintuitive as it is to central bankers who came of age when the inflation of the 1970s defined the central banking challenge, our problem today is insufficient inflation.
More important — in my view — is that those Millenials (basically those young adults who came of age starting arudn 2000) are not that enamored of home buying anyway.
And they are hearing it in part because the rising generation in question — Generation Z, a cohort of Americans who came of age in the era of cable news and social media and an omnipresent internet — is extremely savvy about the workings of the American media.
Like most Midwesterners who came of age in the late 1970s, my first exposure to punk rock came via American television newscasts of Johnny Rotten and The Sex Pistols.
My biggest mistake was to predict that the College of Cardinals would elect a pope who came of age after Vatican II («The Next Pope»).
The poets who came of age after the modernist revolution, on the other hand, have been more cautious, second - guessing, self - conscious; and as a contemporary poet has complained, one result of modernism is that «generation after generation of poets have had confidence in their place undermined.
And in fact, age still matters: the oldest cohort of Catholics, those who came of age during the New Deal, voted the most Democratic in 1996.
The national conversation tends to skip over how much this demographic — who came of age with mass tragedies like the Columbine shooting and 9/11 — want a candidate who conveys a sense of protection in what they see as an «increasingly dangerous world.»
Any Protestant who came of age in some small town in post-war America experienced a kind of cultural homogeneity that no longer exists.
Americans who came of age in the decade after the Second World War are deeply imbued with the values and moral commitments of the American Dream.
No moral issue has the kind of black - and - white clarity for people born after 1960 that it had for those who came of age before 1960.
George McKenna's «Crisis Cross: Democrats, Republicans and Abortion» charts the tragic loss to American Pro-Life activism of a generation of Catholic Democrats who came of age during the 60's Civil Rights movement and the 70's rise of the feminist movement.
Unfortunately, Wenger is not even a shadow of the manager, he used to be and just like player's who come of age, he seriously needs to think about retiring.
Forget the touchdown dances, Hall of Fame middle linebacker Mike Singletary made hitting something to smile about to a generation of NFL fans who came of age in the 1980s.
Malls will always hold a special place in the heart for anyone who came of age in the «90s.
Remember Tony Blair was a politician who came of age in the 1980s.
Again, Jack McEneney: «Anybody who came of age in the sixties watched the cities of this country, whether it was Newark or Chicago or Washington or even Rochester, we watched the cities burning.
It's the baby boomers, who came of age in the Sexual Revolution, not millennials, who are driving the trend.
In particular, I believe there is the need for a new creative campaign which is aimed at winning over the votes of the millennial generation — those who came of age at the turn of the century.
«Those of us who came of age in the Thatcher era know there was another side to the glories which the members on the other benches have been talking about.»
An overall rise in economic prosperity may play a role in this egotism, according to a different study: people who were young adults during hard times are less narcissistic than those who came of age during economic booms.
She found that people who were between 18 and 25 years old during hard economic times, as measured by unemployment rates, were less narcissistic later in life than those who came of age during economic booms.
That insight was reaffirmed by several psychologists who came of age during the 1960s and 1970s, most notably Robert Buckhout, a professor of psychology at Brooklyn College in New York.
Much like the kids in this movie who come of age, so too does Robert Kirbyson's skill as a writer - director in his debut film Snowmen.
The story of a middle class white girl who feels restless to move out of Sacramento and is on a search to figure out who she is might resonate for many young women out there and even some young men, or those who came of age in 2002.
For Smoczynska, who came of age inside the confines of a nightclub where her parents worked, the film's autobiographical dimension was eventually phased out by the specificity of Robert Bolesto's screenplay and sisters Barbara and Zuzanna Wrońskie's music.
As mentioned, Regina George continues to live on in popular culture, courtesy of both social media and the wild imagination of girls who came of age in 2004.
Iconic: The film, which has been tipped for Oscars success is set in 2002, and tells the story of an artistically inclined seventeen - year - old girl, who comes of age in Sacramento, California
Rather, it's a tale of survival; of a persevering young housewife, Suzu (voiced by Rena Nounen), who comes of age years before the bomb drops.
Beautiful Thing thus remains a curious theatrical one - off, and though it's among the more gentle entries in the queer canon, its impact on gay viewers who came of age in the 1990s is surely vast: it was the main feature in the Legacy section of last year's NewFest, and it's rare that I've spoken about it to someone who hasn't broken out into a smile at the mention of its title.
The film is based on the memoir written by Jeannette Walls about «a young girl who comes of age in a dysfunctional family of nonconformist nomads.
It also gives Melrose a post-Imperial flare, as Patrick wrangles with his father's legacy as a wastrel aristocrat who came of age in the Jazz Age and held some, um, colorful views of the world.
In her directorial debut that premiered at Cannes, Natalie Portman plays the mother of the boy who would grow up to be Jerusalem - born writer Amos Oz, who came of age during the beginnings of the state of Israel.
The film is about a smart teenage girl (Bolger) who comes of age in a small town with her self - centered parents (Danes and James Marsden) who had her when they were teenagers.
For those who came of age with «Mork and Mindy,» he left an indelible impression of brilliant manic energy and unrivaled empathic intelligence.
The students who came of age in the 1970s set a benchmark for attainment of education that subsequent generations have surpassed only recently, and then barely.
While 62 percent of those born in America in 1950 attended at least one year of college, the comparable figure for those born in 1975 (and who came of age in 1995) was just 59 percent (see Figure 1).
In celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), IEL is collecting stories from youth and young adults with disabilities who came of age under the ADA and their allies.
In celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the contribution and impact of the ADA Generation, IEL is collecting stories from youth and young adults with disabilities who came of age under the ADA and their allies.
The experience of Baltimore's children who came of age during this era is mirrored in the experiences of urban children across the nation.
Americans who came of age in the late 1980s and early»90s share certain common threads.
The GTI made me a car geek, just as it did so many others who came of age in the 1980s and»90s.
A humorous and poignant memoir of an educated and cultured woman who came of age in Appalachia.
Tells the stories of a generation, America's citizen heroes and heroines who came of age during the Great Depression and the Second World War and went on to build modern America.
All Our Names is the story of a young man who comes of age during an African revolution, drawn from the hushed halls of his university into the intensifying clamor of the streets outside.
One might assume that Millennials, who came of age during the most challenging economic climate in recent memory, might be more likely to save and less likely to go too far into the red.
«They're people in their 30s and 40s who came of age professionally when Michelle wasn't that visible,» she says.»
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