Sentences with phrase «whose subject heading»

The profile does the legwork of materializing before potential love interests and braving with a smile their contemplation, dismissal, exegesis, mockery or the whiplash of being zapped among friends as an e-mail attachment whose subject heading reads, «Check this one out.»

Not exact matches

They both became the subject of scorn toward now - fired head coach Butch Jones, whose last offenses were ugly aside from them.
Other significant interview subjects include Abe Foxman, head of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a worldwide body whose purpose is to fight anti-semitism wherever it occurs and which is officed in the US.
The row involves West Dunbartonshire council's move to cut the number of principal teachers of individual subjects in the area's five secondary schools and replace them with «faculty heads» whose roles cover a range of subjects.
Alluding to ancient Greek and Roman bas - reliefs as well as the classical motif of a rider on horseback, Ray's subject is far from monumental: a young girl in riding clothes atop a horse whose body, head, and tail have all been cropped from the frame.
I can think of few portraits in which a painter's absolute dislike of her subject is made more apparent than in the hatchet job she did on the great poet, curator and critic Frank O'Hara, whose liver - spotted bald head, bared teeth, and mad staring eyes are visible in no other portrait or photo of him I know.
Dorothy Leonard and Walter Swap, who authored a book on the subject (Deep Smarts: How to Cultivate and Transfer Enduring Business Wisdom, HBR Press, 2005) describe these people, whose intuition, judgment and knowledge are stored in their heads, as the core differentiator between the firms we inhabit.
Falling under the latter heading: the firm's work on behalf of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, whose contract and intellectual property dispute with Dick Clark Productions was recently the subject of a two - week bench trial.
Several have included families involved with child maltreatment or at high risk of maltreatment, but hardly any have included families who were the subject of child abuse and neglect reports.41 The Incredible Years (IY) is considered to be one of the most effective interventions for reducing child conduct problems.42 Jamila Reid, Carolyn Webster - Stratton, and Nazli Baydar examined IY, randomly assigning children to the IY program or to a control group that received usual Head Start services.43 Children with significant conduct problems and children of mothers whose parenting was highly critical — arguably those dyads most at risk for child maltreatment — benefited most from IY.
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