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Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump Ride the Populist Wave Feeling the Bern, in G Minor The Bush and Trump Family Grudge Match Behind the Scenes of Harvey Weinstein's Arrest Seven Signs that Your Man's Masculinity Is Nontoxic Starbucks and the Issue of White Space Subscribe to The New Yorkerfor only $1 a week.Plus, get a free tote.
Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump Ride the Populist Wave Feeling the Bern, in G Minor The Bush and Trump Family Grudge Match The Promise of Vaping and the Rise of Juul The Lifespan of a Photographer's Marriage, One Portrait of His Partner at a Time The Trouble with Elon Musk and Grimes Subscribe to The New Yorkerfor only $1 a week.Plus, get a free tote.
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Every now and then, Bobby swung into view and she smiled and waved, feeling glad to be here, the strangest of Sunday picnics.
"My performances let the audiences know that there are invisible waves of energies (brainwave, sound wave, feelings as frequencies) are interconnected," she says.
It looks and feels impulsively provisional, a wave of feeling that has been caught on the ebb or the flow.
Trumpism is not an irresistible wave of feeling in this American moment.
Since becoming a major figure in British public life, Corbyn has often come across as a humble man who is being carried on a wave of feeling.
Haley was known for his abrasive character during his career, but his comments still show the strong wave of feeling against the Patriots among some current and former NFL players.
BOOKS lead for a revised edition of "Lost New York" (Houghton Mifflin; $25) by Nathan Silver... "Lost New York" appeared at the beginning of a popular wave of feeling about the past that was driven largely by the belief that modern architects, left to their own devices, would create unlivable cities.
Meanwhile, the problem of disconnection so perfectly captured in Hague's sweaty rictus 18 years ago has become a global crisis, aptly described by Tony Blair in yesterday's Observer: "It is a vast wave of feeling against the unfairness of globalisation, against elites, against the humdrum navigation of decision-making in an imperfect world".
By Paul Goldberger The New Yorker, September 25, 2000 P. 92 BOOKS lead for a revised edition of "Lost New York" (Houghton Mifflin; $25) by Nathan Silver... "Lost New York" appeared at the beginning of a popular wave of feeling about the past that was driven largely by the belief that modern architects, left to their own devices, would create unlivable cities.
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