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468 Sentences With "reverberations"

How to use reverberations in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reverberations" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reverberations". Mastering all the usages of "reverberations" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Political reverberations The memo furor may also have political reverberations.
Yet sounds were violently silver in his ears, all reverberations.
The resulting realignment will have reverberations far beyond France's borders.
The Profumo Affair had major reverberations in the political sphere.
Writing poems about the somatic reverberations of thwarted — and fulfilled!
These price rises would then have reverberations throughout the economy.
And the Vietnam War and its domestic reverberations loom large.
Reverberations persisted for decades, and the events were long concealed.
The coronavirus has also sent reverberations through the global economy.
Of course such a tragedy sends reverberations throughout the family.
Like the others, it's a painting with deep, enduring reverberations.
It could also, though, be a nuclear test with global reverberations.
If Merkel's refugee gambit implodes, the reverberations will be felt everywhere.
They will have significant reverberations in Washington and around the world.
The Senate campaign is feeling some reverberations from the presidential race.
The case "really sent reverberations through the police community," he said.
The reverberations of that vote were felt throughout the Olympic world.
A C.E.O. trying to tackle the reverberations of his company's product?
The reverberations of his act on Thursday will last for years.
The reverberations of the 2015 protests weren't just felt at Mizzou.
The reverberations are also being felt in other parts of the world.
What's not up for debate is the play's reverberations through Seahawks history.
Essentially, they reduce reverberations within the wires, better isolating and stabilizing sounds.
The reverberations from the Odebrecht scandal come at the worst possible time.
If they don't, there could be grave economic and even global reverberations.
Per Altice: These innovations, over time, created major reverberations in gaming culture.
Reverberations have cut across the U.S. agricultural supply chain - and international markets.
The reverberations of the TrumpCare fiasco will not stop at the Beltway.
Deutsche's problems have had relatively few reverberations in other corners of finance.
But the timing of the decision seemed designed to maximize political reverberations.
Global reverberations from the coronavirus crisis have shown no sign of slowing.
Meanwhile, reverberations are being felt from the airstrike he launched on Syria.
He went ahead, and the reverberations dominated the rest of the year.
She trains her gaze on the history and rarely considers slavery's reverberations.
And this is going to have, I think, some reverberations across the world.
Wide reverberations Trump's decision making on Syria this week has wide reaching implications.
The cafeteria sometimes shudders with the reverberations of a blast from the pit.
Conversations about ideas learned in classrooms have reverberations in changing the campus dialogue.
Should it continue or accelerate, the reverberations will be felt through the market.
Dilla's death sent reverberations through the worlds of hip-hop and production alike.
But if Espy is victorious, it would send reverberations throughout the political system.
The reverberations will be felt in 2900, and perhaps for a lot longer.
It's not hard to see why reverberations, pro and con, built so quickly.
Talk a little bit about that article, because it sort of sent reverberations.
Reverberations from the case have reached the highest levels of the Justice Department.
Though the museum documents local stories, the stories have national and transnational reverberations.
If his health care push fails, the reverberations will affect those other measures.
Parker made a great first impression, then hid behind its reverberations for a while.
These will be huge accomplishments, with reverberations throughout many fields of science and technology.
So as it falls, the reverberations in portfolios and other markets will be greater.
Outside of Uber, there have already been reverberations as a result of the complaint.
The President's reaction epitomized why the reverberations of the 2016 election may never die.
However, I certainly hope the reverberations of this exhibition will escape its gilded enclosure.
His environmental regressivism is setting back the clock on sustainable practices, with global reverberations.
The media buzz around the interview and its Washington reverberations could also carry consequences.
Read our special anniversary coverage of the crisis and its reverberations into the present.
Even in the early 1700s, this was recognized as a work with contemporary reverberations.
The reverberations from Trump's slide among Republicans are seemingly being heard on Capitol Hill.
Each of the week's staggering and occasionally horrific events will have profound political reverberations.
The crime's evidence was hastily brushed aside but its reverberations are lodged in collective memory.
The hum harmonized with the reverberations of Edwards Air Force Base, north of Los Angeles.
So, I think that probably did have reverberations that were not anticipated at the time.
The reverberations from the legal battle with Argentina may be felt for years to come.
Absolutely. It is a final handshake whose reverberations will echo through an era of cinema.
Still, few expected the reverberations that followed: Beijing demanded that the club cancel the speech.
The reverberations from the meeting will continue for days, but what were the main takeaways?
Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg's entry into the race has caused some reverberations.
AMONG THEIR many reverberations, the terrorist attacks of September 11th 2001 had a linguistic side-effect.
But McClusky also said reverberations from the health care fight could affect tax reform as well.
We'll be following this story and other reverberations from today's net neutrality vote as they develop.
Reverberations from the attacks were immediately apparent as tourist sites, normally swarming with visitors, emptied out.
While the GDPR only covers EU citizens, its reverberations are clearly being felt across the globe.
As Mr. Trump overturned the post-9/11 national security consensus, the reverberations spanned the globe.
The reverberations from the case, and the #metoo campaign, continue to be felt around the globe.
Although she felt the reverberations of the crash, her gallery was young enough to be resilient.
The N.C.A.A.'s boycott of North Carolina for championship events had intense reverberations in the state.
With that said, during the week or so that Pluto shifts directions, we'll feel the energetic reverberations.
Republicans fear that if their nominee completely melts down, the reverberations could doom their majorities in Congress.
REVERBERATIONS from Britain's vote to leave the European Union have travelled from the Thames to the Tiber.
Activists on the left argue that the reverberations of his run will be felt even beyond November.
The reverberations of the political change being pushed by the Trump presidency seem to know no boundaries.
There's no way out of that imbroglio without causing significant political reverberations that would last for years.
He warns the reverberations of losing "a little disco in EC1" will spread far beyond its walls.
And though the suspension didn't really affect production, the reverberations from it demonstrably hurt Duck Dynasty's ratings.
The reverberations of the bell radiated out, through the group and echoing down the streets of Seoul.
But the movie succeeds where it counts: showing the reverberations of violence long after most cameras left.
She shouted into a swirling cloud of pain and anger and fed off the reverberations that came back.
The cost to democracy That is not to say there will not be reverberations from the President's interview.
That isn't to say there couldn't be serious reverberations for the Israelis, particularly on its strategies toward Iran.
The more I listen, the more detail I discover, right down to the reverberations of a settling string.
CLS Bank, which caused reverberations throughout the patent landscape by leading to the invalidation of many software patents.
As you'll see in the documentary, the trauma of this separation had grave reverberations in the triplets' lives.
If things go right, the seismic reverberations will illuminate the contours and material composition of what's underneath Thwaites.
AZ-06: You might not have to look very far for reverberations from last week's special election results.
But it does mean that the reverberations of Bannon's appearance would have been felt in the magazine's coffers.
Amid these reverberations, Luiselli's narrator voices her suspicion that the methods of storytelling cannot sufficiently represent contemporary experience.
It had reverberations not only in Iceland, but in China, Britain, Russia, Argentina and some 50 other countries.
The longer the protest lasts, the greater the reverberations it will have throughout the nation and the world.
As a useful byproduct, it gives us a fighting chance at recognizing the past's reverberations in our present.
I think the reverberations of this will live on in the world of work in the new workplace.
But the reverberations from his yet-to-be-revealed report could amount to inestimable political and constitutional consequences.
What remains to be seen are the longer-term reverberations this recent flurry of state action will produce.
Foreign intervention means that even conflicts that begin within borders increasingly spill beyond them, with reverberations across the globe.
Bunny Rogers was nine years old at the time, and the reverberations of that day have stuck with her.
His victory ushered in a political realignment that will have reverberations for the entire political structure in this country.
The reverberations from Trump's decision to go rogue on his own party ripped through the political world Wednesday morning.
How we handle this election in this process will have reverberations for democracy, for an entire generation of voters.
This task seems insignificant for a new president, but the effect of its failure has reverberations felt throughout government.
Why it matters: Economies across the globe are finally healthy after a string of crises that had worldwide reverberations.
No legal wrongdoing on Bush's part was ever proven, but the reverberations lasted long enough to do him damage.
As Judge Millett noted, the facts of this case are not all that rare and reverberations could be significant.
Will news coverage suddenly shift from the debacle in Helsinki and its reverberations to what will happen this fall?
Rappers, many of whom were not much older than me and my friends, became the reverberations of father figures.
" But Trott and his Republican colleagues will hear the reverberations of Weberman's concluding message: "I am committed to fight.
And it must must weigh every word that could cause a stock market slump or have devastating commercial reverberations.
I didn't want to get into too many verbal reverberations, unless they arose naturally, or too many pedantic parallels.
The results are completely convincing, succeeding in part because of (rather than despite) their hauntingly familiar art-historical reverberations.
The reverberations of "Voodoo" — and the "Voodoo" Tour — were still being felt in the music industry several years later.
Its reverberations have not only helped destabilize the wider Middle East, but contributed to the destabilization of Western democracies.
It's a semiautobiographical book about the emotional reverberations in a family after a father dies in a car accident.
She had backed off from Sanders-like purity on Medicare for All seemingly because she feared the political reverberations.
The question now is whether the reverberations of that act will continue to have greater consequences for the plot.
And now the larger issue is that yet another loyalist is gone and that could have long-term reverberations.
If not for "Bird Flu", the reverberations of 30 urumi drummers might not be heard on a nightclub dance floor.
The reverberations are significant, and so just within the last 24 hours that has been tamped down a little bit.
The reverberations from Mr Trump's triumph will echo far longer than over the first few trading sessions. Economist.com/blogs/buttonwood
The Round House looks unflinchingly at sexual violence against Native women and its profound reverberations through the family and society.
The series had two more episodes directly related to the tragedy and the reverberations were felt for seasons to come.
The net didn't move, but you could feel the reverberations across the Forum, possibly the Eastern Conference, and the league.
Harris felt the reverberations of that anger statewide when she ran for attorney general for the first time in 2010.
It was an act of terror whose reverberations—societal, political, technological and, beyond—will be felt far into the future.
"This kind of rejection of reality has reverberations across the government and is indeed a threat to our national security."
The reverberations from the coup attempt were felt directly at an air base that is home to hundreds of Americans.
I could not help but think: Could this blessed collage of reverberations really be the site of those sonic attacks?
On Monday, astronomers made a universe-shaking announcement about the detection of reverberations from the collision of two neutron stars.
"A German Requiem," it appears, has become something of an anthem for our time, with grand social and political reverberations.
The reverberations, the rhetoric and the bloodshed, can be felt in countless developments, from Turkey to Britain, from Orlando to Leeds.
Just as the reverberations from last week's WannaCry ransomware outbreak have started to slow, a new threat has already cropped up.
Meg's life has major reverberations on English and Scottish history (and plays into some of last year's most famous queen movies).
And he warns he will renegotiate bedrock free trade deals, a prospect that could send serious reverberations through the global economy.
An open-back headphone designer doesn't need to worry about dealing with sound reverberations bouncing around inside a closed ear cup.
The death has had massive reverberations in the music industry; its effect on Grande has to be nothing less than monumental.
The geopolitical reverberations should continue to play out in a variety of fields, but make sure you count cybersecurity among them.
Reverberations spread through global financial markets, with European stock markets especially hit as investors took fright over banks' exposure to Turkey.
Cramer considers the real problem with these two stocks to be the reverberations they caused to the rest of the group.
And UK elections will take place the same day; an upset of Prime Minister Theresa May most certainly would carry reverberations.
Ocasio-Cortez has called for abolishing ICE, with her win over the fourth-ranking House Democrat sending reverberations through the party.
Others, like Mark Thatcher's college summer job of guiding rafting trips in the Grand Canyon's Colorado River, have more widespread reverberations.
In Sahnaya on Friday, where residents have become used to the reverberations of bombardments on Daraya, there was an unfamiliar quiet.
And even as food prices have leveled out since 2011, we continue to deal with the reverberations of the Arab Spring.
Not to degrade electronic music, but nothing beats the reverberations of a guitar strum, a smooth drum solo, and uninhibited vocals.
Though officials say the bazaar has resumed normal business, the rial crisis and its political reverberations are surely far from over.
At times, it's as if he were trying to seep into the lumbering, warped street sounds and haunting reverberations around him.
Are you tracking certain plot elements now because they will have reverberations down the line, like you did with this one?
Reverberations from the inquiry into the artist, Philipp Ruch, and his collective, the Center for Political Beauty, have continued to spread.
TEL AVIV — Walk south along the Tel Aviv shoreline these days, and you'll hear the reverberations of a constant low thwacking.
The election of a woman to the Presidency will have myriad reverberations in the life and the institutions of this country.
When Dooley joined the ACC in 22019, the industry was suffering from reverberations of high gas prices and the economic recession.
The biggest barrier to accepting the radical new nature of the job hunt is the reverberations throughout the rest of life.
This quantity was enough to produce around 22016 million ecstasy pills, so its seizure had huge reverberations throughout the international drugs market.
The surgery had major reverberations in Washington, forcing GOP senators to postpone a vote on the controversial Republican bill to replace Obamacare.
"It sounded like four shots, one after another," McClelland recalls, noting that perhaps what she heard included reverberations from the canyon walls.
The romantic reverberations of her excellent last album, "This Is My Hand," share a similar levity while ruminating on intimacy and confidence.
For our first essay — pun very much intended — John Paul Brammer writes about the unexpected reverberations of a high school essay contest.
In addition to drug stocks, the reverberations of a weak quarter from Alcoa were felt across the board — especially in aerospace companies.
The walls and ceiling are covered with bundles of foot-long, gray, triangular prisms that absorb all sound and cancel any reverberations.
To me, the change in this sector will have reverberations far beyond any others, despite what will seem like a slow rollout.
Officials and businessmen had warned of the reverberations of the crisis on an aid-strapped Jordanian economy already plagued by high debts.
By connecting across generations, we become time travelers, casting light on our own possible futures, and feeling the reverberations of our pasts.
"How we handle this election and this process will have reverberations for democracy for an entire generation of voters," he said Saturday.
The production sounds slightly woolly next to the deep, husky reverberations of J Hus or the full-bodied instrumentation of Mura Masa.
Viewers are next reminded of worse economic times, when joblessness soared as the reverberations of the financial crisis rippled through the economy.
It's a move that's sure to have reverberations around the globe, and will undoubtedly impact America's international standing for years to come.
And the nature of the fight over Kavanaugh will trigger recriminations inside the Senate and political reverberations outside for years to come.
And there is no guarantee that such a grave constitutional process and its unpredictable political reverberations can be contained by Democratic leaders.
If the Amazon were to be destroyed tomorrow, the whole world would feel the reverberations in a very, very, very frightening way.
Even when a company closes up shop or gets acquired the diaspora of talent, money and technology may have reverberations down the line.
While The Favourite is a deliriously warped portrayal of an absolutist power structure, The Death of Stalin is about the reverberations of one.
Explosive Charges: Seismologists study the area under the glacier by setting off small explosive charges in the ice and listening for the reverberations.
Lebanon has been a glimmering country ever since the 15-year civil war began in 1975, and the reverberations from that conflict persist.
But it won't change the underlying facts Mueller unearths -- and the reverberations they could cause among everyone outside of Trump's most loyal backers.
The allegations reveal fissures in the heart of the country's foremost non-sectarian religious news outlet—and the reverberations are still being felt.
Christopher Davis — He details his rationale, and attributes the group's recent lag in performance to investor psychology and reverberations from the financial crisis.
Once you crack open the record's jungle-tinged cover, you're treated to seven tracks that speak to the natural world's many sonic reverberations.
If Saudi agents are found to have killed Mr. Khashoggi, the reverberations could sabotage Saudi Arabia's international relations, starting with its neighbor Turkey.
The storm's immediate reverberations in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey — my turf as a regional correspondent for The Times — were certainly clear.
But across North Africa, the reverberations are coursing through the region once again, shaking autocratic governments and posing new questions about the future.
The reverberations of Britain's decision to exit the EU will echo through trading floors and political institutions for many months and probably years.
How badly the tourism industry will suffer is still being determined; in certain places the storm's reverberations will likely be felt for years.
SoftBank&aposs Vision Fund has been rocked by the implosion of star portfolio company WeWork and the reverberations in the venture capital industry.
But by Thursday, the eve of Mr. Trump's inauguration, those decades of promises seemed very real — with reverberations far beyond stone and cement.
It's a reminder that the reverberations of this particular past are not so very far away from us now, hundreds of years later.
Two people were killed and three injured in the Jarchi airstrike, but its reverberations were felt beyond the tiny farming villages north of Kabul.
Political analysts say the reverberations of the Thuringia election will be felt in Merkel's fragile governing coalition of the CDU and Social Democrats (SPD).
The Trump effect isn't only occurring in the states; its reverberations are being felt all over the world, and in Toronto, where I live.
But despite the international reverberations of Trump's proclamation, this may not make a massive difference to the status quo on the ground, experts say.
The White House would likely fight such a step in court, triggering what would be a damaging showdown that would have damaging political reverberations.
Yet it had deeper reverberations, signaling a broad and volatile reshuffling of alliances in and around Syria that has been brewing over recent months.
That is reflected in this offering from Retro Report, a series of video documentaries examining major news stories of the past and their reverberations.
It was part of "Project Mogul," a surveillance effort that used high-altitude balloons to listen for the reverberations of Soviet nuclear-testing blasts.
And many expect the reverberations from the Queens district attorney's race to seep into Albany and the 2021 race for New York City mayor.
"We're still feeling the reverberations of that moment," says the New York-based choreographer Pam Tanowitz, who might be described as a contemporary postmodernist.
The changes could have dire, and still unknowable, reverberations for New York City's 25,000 licensed real estate brokers, whose livelihoods depend on the fees.
The sonic minimalism and reverberations into objects and architecture were incredibly moving and really forced a relationship or moment in the spaces they occupied.
How badly the tourism industry will suffer is still being determined; in certain places the storm's reverberations will likely to be felt for years.
Even that market has felt the reverberations of the Madagascan crisis, though, as demand has risen in the face of high vanilla bean prices.
The unprecedented decision by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban Russia from the 2018 Winter Olympics is sending reverberations in Moscow and beyond.
Some 5,500 miles west of Putin, the still bitter reverberations of that divisive election tightened their corrosive grip over the institutions of US political life.
Amanda Stanton and Robby Hayes dated for what was probably less than a month, but we're still feeling the reverberations of the relationship via Twitter.
At the ICC Champions Trophy Tournament, though, which started in England and Wales on June 1st, the bats were emitting more than those soothing reverberations.
Closing off the acoustic chamber around your ear complicates a headphone's design and threatens the purity of its sound by creating undesirable resonances and reverberations.
They'll also use seismic testing, detonating tiny explosives on the surface of the ice and measuring the reverberations as they bounce off the bedrock below.
The reverberations were so strong they created a tsunami with 30-foot waves that began pounding the nation's eastern seaboard less than an hour later.
I took a detour to raise the reverberations from her criticism of Trump to The Associated Press and The New York Times in recent interviews.
But this time the nods feel less like obligatory acts of fan service than mythological reverberations, signaling a deeper, more intricate narrative intelligence at work.
"It certainly doesn't appear that China is weaponizing its Treasury holdings just given the small decline and the general lack of market reverberations," Hill added.
This story, however, is about a woman who managed to get back on her feet, and yet still struggles with the reverberations from being homeless.
The company says that while these issues may not affect the biggest social media companies too much, the reverberations could certainly affect companies like Pinterest.
The bruising battle to confirm Brett M. Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court may be over, but the reverberations for women who opposed him are not.
It just means that any event that impacts the country -- or at least captivates the country for a day or a month -- have political reverberations.
Through a cast of individualized but relatable characters, Sayles paints a vivid picture of a region and the reverberations of its history into the present.
Her work has always examined the great erasures and silences — the lost and suppressed stories of the Middle Passage, of slavery and its long reverberations.
Avoiding the reverberations after a North Korean nuclear test is as simple as avoiding several Asian markets in close proximity, as well as European stocks.
Convenience store snacks and the reverberations of a national tragedy are fodder for "The Wedge Horse," Nick Gandiello's affecting if overwrought drama for Fault Line Theater.
A week and a half after Donald Trump officially became America's new President-Elect, the reverberations of that decisions can still be felt far and wide.
There isn't a "chorus" behind Donald Trump's debate performance, and that could have reverberations on the GOP's congressional races, experts told CNBC's "Squawk Alley " on Thursday.
Snap's success has had reverberations across the tech landscape, so much so that Facebook has essentially been copying its products, including Snapchat Stories, to keep up.
For better or worse, the reverberations of millions of white voters' support for a Trump candidacy will continue for American democracy, long after next Tuesday's election.
These allies are deeply opposed to the Assad regime and invested in the opposition prevailing in a civil war that has major reverberations for their region.
"Markets are still feeling the reverberations of Yellen's dovish speech, with the U.S. dollar retreating across the board, " said Mizuho Bank's forex strategist, ‎Chang Wei Liang.
But in a surprising decision yesterday that one day could have reverberations across the internet, a three-judge panel in California decided the case will proceed.
The reverberations could test whether, since the global financial crisis, officials have put in place the necessary measures to protect the broader system from a shock.
"Headsound," which premieres here, is inspired by turning those "cranial reverberations" into music — an activity he sees as a sort of foil for his day job.
The romantic reverberations of her excellent last album, "This Is My Hand," released in 2014, share a similar levity while ruminating on intimacy and self-esteem.
Being viewed as a candidate on the attack is a particularly dangerous attribute in Iowa, where Democrats still feel reverberations from the 2004 and 2016 contests.
And the reverberations from Trump's demand for import tariffs on aluminum and steel are still powering a frantic effort by US allies to win opt-outs.
And, it's hard to imagine that there will be no further reverberations from this story over the coming hours and days as official Washington processes it.
The change to the co-benefit calculation would have reverberations throughout the EPA's entire air pollution regulatory regime, since past rule frequently relied on those benefits.
Incidentally, even if you don't love Chris Brown, you've likely felt the reverberations from his troubled history, which is now inextricably linked to domestic violence and assault.
This lack of common decency has had reverberations in situations beyond just the chaos of marches and Trump rallies, though the underlying hate is no less palpable.
Equally importantly, the reverberations will be felt in Moscow, where anger and frustration over the impact of U.S. sanctions – and by implication Vladimir Putin's leadership – is increasing.
Russia fears an ISIS victory in Syria would have reverberations at home, as some of the top military commanders of ISIS are Russian speakers of Chechen origin.
It sent reverberations through the industry and sparked conversation about authenticity, true regret, and the ability to change and grow that the industry is still grappling with.
Given transatlantic interconnectedness, the ramifications and reverberations of Trump's pending Iran deal decision this month will be felt not just in Europe, but at home in Washington.
In their tiny undergraduate world, these reverberations of feeling constitute a major event — a "Sparsholt affair" of its own, before the later, public one is even imaginable.
The women struggle together against an indifferent and hostile world, drawing on their friendship and solidarity to face the reverberations of rape, homophobia and a child's death.
"Dialogue (DUO2015)," the final piece in Act 1, pairs Brigel Gjoka and Riley Watts — an extraordinary dancer with silky athleticism — in a frisky duet of physical reverberations.
What is less clear now is how the reverberations of the Lehman Brothers collapse will affect the Democratic Party in critical elections this November and in 2020.
An on-the-ground investigation, published in The New York Times Magazine late last year, sent reverberations throughout the Defense Department and among former United States officials.
"Reverberations of these epic bushfires will be felt for generations," Joe Fontaine, a lecturer in environmental and conservation sciences at Australia's Murdoch University, said in a statement.
The killing of Soleimani, in a drone strike at Baghdad airport, is causing reverberations not just for the U.S. and Iran but also across the Middle East.
If that's so, then the music of "The Man Who Never Stopped Sleeping" might be a lullaby rendered by eerie synthesizer — all high tones and haunting reverberations.
Only time will tell whether recent ructions in China are indicative of broader challenges in that economy and whether the reverberations across global financial markets are lasting.
The Nation 'I Just Wanted to Be Free': The Radical Reverberations of Muhammad Ali by Dave Zirin Zirin writes about the intersection of race and politics in sports.
The tough words from media executives come during an extremely tense time between the press and Facebook, whose small algorithm tweaks can have huge reverberations for publishers' businesses.
To conductors' chagrin, that may involve singers performing at points around the stage rather than in a neat line at the front, where the optimal reverberations are produced.
That's an approach that could escalate the standoff with the President into an epochal Supreme Court drama with massive political reverberations -- which many experts think Trump would lose.
But the idea that concerns over climate change could limit not just mines producing thermal coal but coking coal too is new, with the potential for broad reverberations.
No one is going to be able to escape the reverberations of the Trump-branded Supreme Court, long after his presidency, and potentially even his life is over.
In a moment, the church and Charleston were changed forever, and reverberations from the shooting and its implications for race relations in the United States were felt nationwide.
The moment is deeply paradoxical, its metaphoric reverberations made all the more powerful by the repetition of the practice by each of the ten men in the film.
It is easy to see the hand of supply and demand in the rise of inequality, but the reverberations of political, corporate and social choices are also important.
Other families of those killed in previous police shootings, who happened to be gathered in Detroit for a conference this past week, felt reverberations of their own pain.
And unfortunately it affected the candidates (see my Sanders write-up above) and will likely have some reverberations on how people watching on TV thought the field performed.
Rucker and Leonnig have composed their book, they write, out of a desire to step out of the churning news cycle and "assess the reverberations" of Trump's presidency.
Though the committee fight was discouraging (and not everyone agrees about its tactical wisdom), its reverberations reached well beyond DC. It produced an enormous jolt for the movement.
Listen to the emotional reverberations of "You See," see if you can catch them performing live in your city, and stay tuned for more from these up and comers.
The surgery went well but had massive reverberations in Washington, forcing GOP Senators to postpone a vote on the controversial Republican bill to replace Obamacare until McCain could return.
An hour down the road from Morristown, in Watertown, reverberations continue from a council meeting last October at which speakers outlined an economic and moral case for welcoming refugees.
It's an unnerving metaphor for the reverberations of rape; the implications are that Diane, after being violated by Cooper, became a warped version of herself, literally a corrupt doppelganger.
We see only brief snippets of this horrible moment in American history in the show itself, but its reverberations are felt in the show's main timeline — an alternate 2019.
Apart from about 33,23 employees finding new jobs, some pissed off investors and some prime office space for rent South of Market, what global economic reverberations would that have?
So it was that Turkey opened a new front in the Syrian war, and in its unending conflict with Kurdish insurgents, with reverberations rippling to Washington, Moscow and Istanbul.
The work features environmental sounds typically outside the range of human hearing, like the reverberations of an earthquake or the clicking of a water-stressed tree, transposed into audibility.
Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump's fragile political standing among American voters may be about to cause dangerous reverberations in the Middle East, even provoking the Pope to express concern.
He would go on to embrace the language of fiscal discipline and benefit cuts, signing a welfare reform bill into law that has had devastating reverberations to this day.
"Despite the hashtag Me Too in Hollywood, and then its reverberations in venture capital, and in tech, we have seen a remarkable rebound effect for harassers," Kapor Klein says.
The schools have also seen reverberations from the opioid crisis, which has brought families wrestling with drug and alcohol problems from outlying areas into the largest urban center, Anchorage.
Like "Songs of Innocence," the new album employed multiple producers, and U2 has clearly pondered every nanosecond of sound, whether polishing its reverberations or administering calibrated amounts of distortion.
IN 1957, LEO CASTELLI converted the living room of his apartment on East 77th Street into an art gallery, a modest gesture that would come to have serious reverberations.
Such pressure suggests that the vote could have political reverberations if progressive-leaning voters treat it as a litmus test in future contests like the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries.
The reverberations continue: In 2015 the Yurok tribe declared a state of emergency after seven young people committed suicide in one 18-month period in isolated Weitchpec (population 150).
Whether caused by a diseased body or a diseased body politic, the belated reverberations of trauma lay bare our common humanity: in particular, our individual and yet shared defenselessness.
THE CRUCIBLE Arthur Miller's play about the Salem witch trials, written in 212 as an allegory for McCarthyism, is sure to have some interesting reverberations in 22 America, too.
Its impact is really just starting to be felt now, but there's no question that the reverberations from it will be felt wider, deeper and longer than most expect.
Political implications The ruling will have reverberations on the presidential election, where the fate of the Supreme Court has been front-and-center after the death of Scalia in February.
Wagner's observations of the relationship between aesthetic concerns (images, language) and the reverberations of atrocity are marvelous in part because they have the quality of being hidden in plain view.
The reverberations claimed the job of Tory Prime Minister David Cameron, and set off a wave of resignations among the opposition Labor Party leadership, which also backed the "remain" camp.
But poverty as we know it never ended, a stark reality shaping the latest video documentary from Retro Report, which examines major news events of the past and their reverberations.
The fallout from Trump's performance at the summit will have significant and unpredictable political and geopolitical reverberations in the United States and around the world, CNN's Stephen Collinson said. 2.
Browder is obviously nothing like the cartoon villain that Putin portrays him to be, and yet his political influence means that his every move, past and present, has global reverberations.
On this week's Nerdcast, we're talking about how the virus is altering politics: from chaotic or canceled 2020 primaries to its reverberations in the White House and on Capitol Hill.
Republicans were already facing a rough time in 2018 given the usual reverberations against a first-term president of the same party, and the tax bill could exacerbate those difficulties.
There is no reason (other than white supremacy and its reverberations) to foreground the work of the white accomplices in B.H.A.A.A.D. over the work of POC resisters in the coalition.
The reverberations of the killing of five police officers in Dallas on July 7 are still being felt, while issues of race and criminal justice continue to roil the country.
So in 2000, when David McVicar first directed this "Agrippina" in Brussels, it made sense for him to update those reverberations — and to make them explicit, rather than the subtext.
The reverberations of the attack were also felt elsewhere in the market, as the Dow dropped more than 300 points at its opening before clawing back some of the losses.
This reflective series always seems eager to get Todd's sensitive detective out of London and into the English countryside, where the reverberations of World War I are still being felt.
The reverberations from allegations that tennis authorities had failed to act on suspicions of match-fixing, which overshadowed the first days of the tournament, had all but faded away on Friday.
All those races are long shots for the challengers — Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Adem Bunkeddeko, and Suraj Patel, respectively — but if any of them pull it off, there will be major reverberations.
S. trade war, Britain's choppy road to leaving the European Union, Italy's standoff with Brussels over its budget, and crises in Argentina and Turkey all sent reverberations through markets in 2018.
"As the reverberations of the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements continue to resonate in the entertainment industry and beyond, this investigation marks how far we still have to go," the report concludes.
"You can get a concussion from falling on your butt and having reverberations go up to your brain," says Kimberly Harmon, a physician and concussion researcher at the University of Washington.
A clear violation of its international commitments, Russia's annexation of Crimea was the first shifting of European borders since the end of World War II, and continues to have political reverberations.
Reverberations spread through global markets on Friday after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed higher tariffs on metal imports from Turkey, sending the country's lira currency TRYTOM=D3 deeper into a tailspin.
But packing a vibrant collective's half century of work into a two-night stand isn't really possible, especially since Issue Project Room was also trying to illuminate so many contemporary reverberations.
The reverberations of an affair between a young actress and her director in Munro's "The Children Stay" (from "The Love of a Good Woman") haunt her more than 30 years later.
When five people were murdered at Sharon Tate's house on the night of August 8-83, 1969, the reverberations went far beyond the elite Hollywood community of which she was part.
Mr. Hnath is assessing the reverberations of a highly dramatic action — Nora's exit from the doll's house — to remind us that what follows such momentous, clear-cut gestures is never simple.
But when it comes to Barbara Strozzi and her anniversary year, there are some striking reverberations in the present, as women's voices have made their impact, despite the inevitable nasty backlash.
The idea of designating Mexican cartels as terrorist organizations may not sound crazy — after all, the cartels do inflict terror — but the idea has sent reverberations of fear through Mexican officials.
But the extent to which the White House is controlling the process is likely to stoke fresh turmoil around a nomination that is already certain to trigger long-term political reverberations.
The reverberations of the election were keenly felt in North Point, where many inhabitants – like Fu's grandparents – hail from the southern Chinese province of Fujian, up the coast from Hong Kong.
Along the way, Capitol Hill continued to feel the reverberations of the national reckoning with sexual harassment, and the Federal Communications Commission moved forward with a controversial move to deregulate ISPs.
November will bring Mr. LeFranc's "Rancho Viejo," which traces the reverberations of a young couple's rocky marriage on a southwestern suburb many miles away where their parents live; Daniel Aukin will direct.
The final in Yokohama may have ended up as a straight fight between Germany and the Seleção, but it was the upsets of the previous rounds which sent reverberations around the globe.
Amazon's $13.7 billion bid for Whole Foods Market has sent reverberations across the sector, fueling speculation that the U.S. tech giant may also be weighing deals in France or other European countries.
Her works as both a performance artist and a musician have not only helped to shape both media in the ensuing years, but have also had wider reverberations in society at large.
Iran deal reverberations The report and the former officials' response highlight how controversial the Iran deal continues to be, even after President Donald Trump's May 8 decision to leave the international pact.
Like those moments in US-Russia summit lore, the events that unfolded Monday are likely to have significant and unpredictable political and geopolitical reverberations in the United States and around the world.
Those decisions, part of the "no platforming" philosophy which would deny hate speech purveyors a place to assemble and share their views, will likely have many reverberations in the days to come.
And as seesawing stock markets, reverberations in the worlds of international business and travel, and rising death and infection rates show, the White House remains deeply vulnerable to events it cannot control.
Let's put the idea that Trump can cancel the general election in a bin with all of the other conspiracy theories kicking around the internet regarding the reverberations and impacts from coronavirus.
The next morning, Mr. Smith said, they realized the reverberations of that decision: 4,500 hourly workers who supported the campus were no longer needed as the headquarters turned into a ghost town.
She said it took months to shake off the psychological and emotional reverberations of co-curating the retrospective, which opened just after she'd turned 60 and included artworks from the mid-1970s.
The book includes a detailed account of the pushback Mr. Farrow said he had received from the news division's executives, and his reporting on Mr. Lauer could have reverberations at the network.
It's a brief collection of seven songs that use only a lone piano and her whispery vocals — sometimes solo, more often wafting in as overdubbed harmonies — all suspended amid reverberations and hiss.
While a Morse victory would certainly have national reverberations, Morse is running, as Rivera put it, to represent one district that's trying to figure out whether it's ready to embrace the future.
In the political sphere, investors will be keeping an eye out for any more noise coming out of the White House, as the Russia-linked scandal continues to cause reverberations in markets.
US political reverberations Netanyahu's survival will also have a wide impact on politics in Washington, where support for Israel has been almost universal and one of the few areas of genuine bipartisanship.
But since then, he's spoken in breezy terms about the reverberations of a military showdown that both sides say they don't want but is a risk given the level of hair trigger tensions.
And after her violin bow was lowered, the last reverberations of its strings hushed, Urso "was obliged to reappear again and again" on the stage as the audience refused to end their applause.
Obama chose to punt -- to "liberate" himself from the responsibility to lead -- and half a million are dead, more than 11 million displaced, with reverberations from the refugee crisis still toppling European leaders.
It was impossible not to draw parallels to the ailing music industry, which had seen it all before, with the reverberations of early P2P services like Napster still echoing across the industry today.
The Federal Reserve had warned extensively of the risk of financial reverberations from a Brexit vote, which was one of the factors that led to it holding off from raising rates this year.
A quarter-century after Newt GingrichNewton (Newt) Leroy GingrichMORE led the GOP to take back control of the House of Representatives—after four decades of Democratic control—Washington is still feeling its reverberations.
It was a measure of the regard for Officer Gerald's sacrifice, and a dramatic testament to the wide and unsettling reverberations set off by the killing of the three officers here on Sunday.
The long waves of red and white that spread along the sides of the animation are surface waves that bounce through crust material — their reverberations suggested the moon-like qualities of Mars' crust.
The news that SoftBank would give Adam Neumann close to $1.7 billion to leave WeWork's board and give up his voting power sent reverberations through the tech and finance worlds on Tuesday morning.
The allies are experiencing the reverberations of populist revolts that erupted in 2016 -- in the Brexit vote and the election of Trump -- and are now slamming into legislatures and breeding division and stasis.
The reverberations of his decision to trade his Nike swoosh for a Uniqlo red square reached all the way to the gilded rooms of the Paris couture, where I was when it happened.
This week we discussed the Chinese Exclusion Act, the first anti-immigrant law directed at a specific nationality; its reverberations on contemporary immigration policy and what it means to be Asian-American today.
It is because I've heard the story, because the movement has not stopped, reverberations inside me that take me away from where and who I am, that jolt me out of this body.
Unless lawmakers reach budget deal by January 19, the government could shut down, in a high-risk scenario for both parties and the President that could have expansive political reverberations come November's elections.
For anyone who has given up on the belief that fact will win out in a political world with so much fiction, the reverberations from this week should provide a modicum of hope.
Washington (CNN)Twenty-four hours removed from The New York Times' blockbuster report about President Donald Trump's taxes -- and those of his father, Fred -- the reverberations were beginning to be felt in earnest.
It's hard to finish a single page in Gordon's book without a slight tingle of fearful familiarity, of reverberations in rhetoric and public opinion — a recognition that, maybe, it has always been thus.
There are the reverberations from the base voters — concerns among moderates about either a messy impeachment or a president who might not be on the level as it relates to our chief foreign foe.
The size and impact of today's Twitter protest is yet to be seen, but the reverberations of today's protest against both Twitter and perpetrators of sexual assault will be felt for a long time.
"As the reverberations of the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements continue to resonate in the entertainment industry and beyond, this investigation marks how far we still have to go," wrote researcher Dr. Stacy L. Smith.
In this way, the theme reminds me a bit of the arch-plot of David Mitchell's "Cloud Atlas," in which the actions of a character in one era have reverberations down through the years.
"People are really beginning to wake up to the reverberations of Brexit, not just the U.K. but Europe, the United States and the rest of the world," said Philip Diehl, president of U.S. Money Reserve.
On "Lionhearted," she relies on the composure of her voice (which has a touch of Feist's whispery quavers), the delicate picking of her guitar and an eerie ambient backdrop devised from acoustic instruments and reverberations.
The production applies the reverential tone and cavernous reverberations of Sigur Ros — tolling piano notes, slow cymbal crescendos, shivery string tremolos — while Jónsi's high voice hovers, in wordless oohs and ahs, like a distant benediction.
Letting these creeps go with a slap on the wrist has wide reverberations and creates a climate that just isn't fucking safe for comedians, and especially comedians who are women - but also comedy club staff.
The lawsuit will certainly have reverberations in the wireless industry for years to come, and could lead to big changes in the cellular modem market as 5G technology — the successor to 4G LTE — takes hold.
The anti-establishment reverberations from almost six months of street protests swept through polling stations across Hong Kong on Sunday, as voters in record numbers roundly rejected pro-Beijing candidates in favor of pan-democrats.
In order to replicate the exact reverberations and sound quality for each individual space, Melillo set the minimum frequency to 20 hertz, the lowest audible one; the maximum corresponds to the date each club closed.
It started when Woods tipsily made out with Thompson at a party that fateful February night, and we can bet that the reverberations from that one moment will last us up until March 31, like clockwork.
The move came just minutes before the meeting was to start, as the company that aims to organize the world's information struggles to deal with reverberations from the memo and its decision to fire the author.
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi hosts German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande on an island off the coast of Naples ahead of September's EU summit called to discuss reverberations from the Brexit vote.
And with Florida's congressional redistricting coming up in 2020, when the governor elected this year will have veto power, the reverberations of the 2018 election could be felt in Washington for the next decade and longer.
But, with Congress, the public and the media largely focused on the decision to bomb Syria and all of the spidering reverberations from it, there will simply be less attention and coverage given to the investigations.
"If they lost their right to work here, our university would suffer enormous damage which, given our role in research, would have reverberations across the UK," the academics said in a letter to the Times newspaper.
Why it matters: If the alliance is indeed fracturing, it could have huge reverberations in the Middle East, especially in relation to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process and the Trump administration's "maximum pressure" campaign against Iran.
The investigation into Giuliani and his Soviet-born associates in the Southern District of New York is the highest profile Justice Department case involving Ukraine and already produced political reverberations, factoring into the recent impeachment inquiry.
That, paired with the clearest signs yet that the Russia investigation is coming to a close, including reverberations from the indictment of Trump's political guru Roger Stone, is deepening impressions of a White House under siege.
We don't often think about the reverberations of historical events such as these on visual culture, but as the book shows, visual culture both shapes and is shaped by culture at large, dramatically impacted by world events.
But it's even more true in this 24 Democratic presidential race, where -- if the reverberations from the first debate last month are any indication -- the debates will play an outsized role in how the contest plays out.
After the Paris attacks in November, the conventional wisdom held that the reverberations would hit Trump -- who lacks foreign policy experience and often spurns the nuances of diplomacy -- and elevate more seasoned candidates like former Florida Gov.
Markets were also still feeling the reverberations from Beijing's announcement on Friday that it would slap additional tariffs on up to $210.19 billion of U.S. imports in response to Washington's tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium products.
The novel follows the reverberations of their fates on their descendants on both sides of the Atlantic, as Effia's family tree stays behind in Africa and Esi's is violently shifted to the plantations in the American South.
"Regardless of what (Carter) conveys, the reverberations caused by Trump's election have made many countries envisage a future where a robust U.S. presence may not be a certainty," said Reed Foster, a defense analyst for IHS Jane's.
The recent reverberations began not with an accusation but with a defense: During a visit to Chile in January, Francis defended Juan Barros Madrid, a Chilean bishop who had long been accused of covering up abuse reports.
Chief Steve Anderson of the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department called the death of Mr. Hambrick "a tragedy" while also noting that Officer Delke's family and the Police Department have been affected by the shooting and its reverberations.
"This increase in year-over-year filings indicates that the reverberations of the 2015 oil price crash will continue to be felt in the industry through at least the first half of 2020," Haynes and Boone said.
Every move Trump makes, every poll that fluctuates, everything that happens in politics between now and November 2020 will be analyzed as part of the reverberations from what happened on this one fateful night in December 2019.
For over two decades, this American artist has assiduously imbued her modest, low-lying sculptures and wall pieces — handmade from assorted found materials, dissected objects and, occasionally, borrowed texts — with complex reverberations of literature, history and philosophy.
There are outliers — the throbbing pulse of "Filthy" has reverberations of acid house, and "Supplies" suggests someone has been listening to Migos — but for much of this album, Mr. Timberlake is content to live in the past.
What happened in Syria did not stay in Syria: The war's reverberations have roiled politics in Europe, strained U.S. allies in the Middle East, and smashed long-held norms of conflict, such as battlefield use of chemical weapons.
As Israel entrenches itself deeper into all of Jerusalem (Netanyahu was not unaware of the reverberations of his final lines at Monday's ceremony: "God bless Jerusalem, the eternal, undivided capital of Israel"), any future withdrawal becomes more fraught.
The trio had not been heard from since scaling back a 2006 tour that suffered from continuing reverberations from "the incident": a remark the singer Natalie Maines had made about President George W. Bush a few years earlier.
But it was another example of Trump speaking imprecisely at best, misleadingly at worst and offering disinformation about a crisis that could have profound reverberations for him in his reelection year if it causes a major economic downturn.
Mr. Sigurdsson's pieces floated the viola da gamba's throaty lines, sometimes echoing Baroque filigree, in hovering, otherworldly electronic tones and reverberations; it was as if a classical heritage was being perceived from some distant perspective, like our own.
What's clear is that the reverberations from the death of Flack, a longtime staple of Britain's raucous tabloid press, are being widely felt -- with fundamental questions raised about the symbiotic relationship between the media and today's television personalities.
In certain moments — like when Sabrina Ionescu, the University of Oregon's incandescent star, sank 3-pointers at the buzzer to end the first and third quarters — the players not only heard the crowd, they also felt its reverberations.
The sudden shock to the European body politic of more than a million refugees and migrants in 2015 pushed sentiment far to the right in Europe, and the reverberations were felt as far away as the United States.
"Importantly, we do not believe that Apple's production schedule is still changing materially with most current delay reports simply dated reverberations of decisions Apple made back in the spring," JPMorgan's Rod Hall said in a note to investors.
The clash also took place against a backdrop of a Trump campaign in dire straits, as the reverberations from a 2005 video in which the nominee spoke in lurid and aggressive terms about women continue to be felt.
Gao made the remarks at the start of a two-day meeting of trade ministers from G20 economies in Shanghai, as uncertainty hangs over the outlook for a slow-growing global economy now beset by post-Brexit reverberations.
Without a closed enclosure that creates unwanted reverberations inside the ear cup, an open-back headphone design can be focused on improving the acoustics pointed at the ear instead of fixing the problems created by the shell around it.
Morawiecki, who is a deputy prime minister and also serves as economy minister, said an expected U.S. rate rise next month would have an impact on the Polish currency and debt, as reverberations would be felt in markets worldwide.
Yet for all the reverberations caused by Henderson's trans-promotional jump, the simplest and most compelling aspect of his move to Bellator is that it opens the door to a plethora of exciting matchups for the former lightweight king.
"Many in Forsyth believed that 'racial purity' was their inheritance and birthright," Patrick Phillips writes in "Blood at the Root: A Racial Cleansing in America," an astonishing and thoroughgoing account of the event, its context and its thunderous reverberations.
Occasionally this music's reverberations make it out of the city but even if it doesn't, that never really seems like the point—which lends to a sort of strange clarity of vision to its best rappers, singers, and producers.
Ahead of the official commemoration, the historian Jill Lepore reviews seven of these books on our cover this week, looking into the context of the moon landing at the time, as well as the reverberations of that achievement today.
But US allies see rising tensions as the logical result of Trump's decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal, a move that was wildly popular with his base but threatened inevitable strategic reverberations that are now beginning to unfold.
The standout this year has been Shane Renfro's debut full-length as RF Shannon, Jaguar Palace, a softly psychedelic guitar record built around echoes and reverberations, written to be played out in the middle of the desert on a heavy trip.
It has an instrument that will measure seismic activity (and pick up reverberations from meteorite impacts), a kind of thermometer that sticks itself 16 feet beneath the martian surface, and a device that will take stock of the Red Planet's rotation.
"It is a symbolically important victory for President [Mohamed] Farmajo, who vowed to defeat Al-Shabab within two years, but it is unclear if Robow's formal defection to the government will have any major reverberations inside the insurgency," he said.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Reverberations from the U.S. Supreme Court's major ruling backing abortion rights were felt on Tuesday as the justices rejected bids by Mississippi and Wisconsin to revive restrictions on abortion doctors matching those struck down in Texas on Monday.
If you have an aircraft of 50 or so people being blown out of the sky there is going to be a great amount of panic and there will indeed be significant economic reverberations, and of course significant loss of life.
The deaths of Anthony Bourdain and Jonathan Gold, the continuing reverberations of the #MeToo movement throughout the restaurant world, comfort foods both savory and sweet — these were the subjects that drew the most readers to New York Times Food in 2018.
Ms. Warren's policy announcement sent reverberations from New York to Silicon Valley, as she further cemented herself as one of the Democratic candidates most willing to call for large-scale changes to the country's structure in the name of equality.
But where's the influence we all thought was coming: The reverberations from a thoroughly nontraditional royal, a woman who upended tight-lipped wedding protocol to orchestrate an event that changed expectations about everything the word "princess" (or even "duchess") could mean?
But the extent to which any elected leader can control the virus, the public reaction to its spread and the political and economic reverberations that saw a stock market rout last week and fears of a global economic downturn, remains uncertain.
" The editors said Rutenberg "further deepened" the role and "brought investigative energy and analytical power to subjects ranging from the Murdoch empire, the reverberations of the #MeToo movement within media, and the relationship between The National Enquirer and the president.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads The reverberations of curator Melissa Rachleff's exhibition, Inventing Downtown: Artist-Run Galleries in New York City, 1952–1965 at the Grey Art Gallery, New York University (January 10–April 1, 2017), continue to be felt.
A toxic political brew is percolating around the UK's decision Thursday to leave the European Union, a fateful vote with consequences not just for America's closest historical ally but for Western stability that could trigger economic and political reverberations in the United States.
King's vision of a multicultural America demanded truth and reconciliation, one that acknowledged slavery's contemporary reverberations, criticized elected officials for inflaming already heated racial passions, and identified children of all colors and backgrounds as the hope for a future free of hate.
Republicans, who are trying to retain control of the U.S. Congress in November elections, are seeking to balance their desire for another conservative justice on the court with sensitivity about how they handle sexual misconduct allegations amid the reverberations of the #MeToo movement.
THE MODEL APARTMENT (1995) by Donald Margulies An enormously powerful work that only gradually reveals its hand, this masterly play segues from a classic comedy of Jewish neurosis into a harrowing assessment of the long-term reverberations of a barbaric chapter in history.
If it withstands further appeals, the ruling also will have lasting reverberations across the federal government when the executive branch and Congress are at odds, as well as in the court system in Washington, which hears most major separation-of-powers disputes.
As Diehl chronicles Louise's creative and emotional growth from Nixon's crash-and-burn era to the hope-and-change sunrise of Obama, the political resonances of her site-specific art take a back seat to the personal reverberations of geography and culture.
As Diehl chronicles Louise's creative and emotional growth from Nixon's crash-and-burn era to the hope-and-change sunrise of Obama, the political resonances of her site-specific art take a back seat to the personal reverberations of geography and culture.
Though what he ended up with certainly worked out, it looked like it hurt; kneecap on packed-in dirt can't feel all that good, nor can a follow-through that sends the bat-head knocking straight into the ground and reverberations up the arm.
Trump doubles down with Putin invitation Coats' humiliation, however, was not the most troubling development on another stunning day of reverberations from the Helsinki summit, on which Trump moved on from haphazard cleanup efforts to a defiant counterattack that was embodied by the Putin invitation.
Clinton still loses, there will be reverberations beyond national politics; Madison Avenue and its clients will have to further assess the effectiveness of what has been considered the most important marketing tool in media history for the better part of the last four decades.
The ornamental "We Know Very Little" likewise demanded my aesthetic contemplation of emergence, suggesting a vegetal generative force-field of reverberations that resonate like a web of interconnected intensities, something that resonates with my interest in Classical Greek poetry, where things often become other things.
The Japanese investor SoftBank will give the former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann close to $1.7 billion to leave the company's board and give up his voting power, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday morning, sending reverberations through the worlds of tech and finance.
The U.K. is currently set to leave the EU on March 29, a step with economic and political reverberations that will last for generations, but it's not at all clear what that exit will look like — or if it will ultimately happen on time or at all.
The idea that once Trump leaves the White House -- whether involuntarily in January 2021 or voluntarily-ish in January 2025 -- the impacts and reverberations of what he has done to the presidency (and to the way in which the presidency is covered) will disappear is a fallacy.
A white sheet with a blood red imprint of a body flutters on the overgrown hedges of Berlin's Hamburger Bahnhof, while the wailing reverberations of a bellowing cello and the heart-wrenching sounds of crying, layered on top of one another, drift from several portable speakers.
This was the year of a second, sleaze-flecked New Labour landslide, foot and mouth disease, the sentencing of Barry George, the slow conceptual withering of the Millennium Dome, the race riots in Burnley and Brixton and of the year of 9/11 and its seismic reverberations.
Most conspicuous among these is Gareth Hinds's THE ILIAD: A Graphic Novel Adaptation (Candlewick, $27.99), a careful, informative and compelling rendering of the Greek epic poem of the legend of the Trojan War — specifically the reverberations of the dispute between the warrior Achilles and King Agamemnon.
The long term reverberations of the ANA/K2 report are evident in the fact that nearly three-quarters of advertisers report paying tech fees in addition to their agency's compensation, including ad serving fees, ad verification fees, data fees, pre-bid verification fees, DSP and platform fees.
Beyond its utility in helping the boys and their coach survive, there's a pivotal aspect of working with our emotions in meditation -- one that may also help these boys navigate the complex fallout of their experience, both the media attention and the potential, personal traumatic reverberations.
Uploaded to the YouTube channel Relax Sleep ASMR, "White Noise Sounds of Frozen Arctic Ocean with Polar Icebreaker Idling - Creating Delta Waves" is exactly what the title describes, a 10-hour recording of sub-zero reverberations of distant howling wind, falling snow, and a ship's engine.
This was always the flaw in Pelosi's plan: whatever she said to the New York Times, she wasn't going to push the Squad out of the spotlight, because the voters she's most concerned about aren't following Ocasio-Cortez's Twitter feed, they're feeling the reverberations of Fox News.
Seeing Arthur Miller's "All My Sons," directed by the Stratford acting veteran Martha Henry, just after "Macbeth," I noted how both plays concern the unforeseen reverberations of immoral acts, how evil can spread its influence with a viral force, unleashing discord, distrust, destruction in families and societies.
All this was before the recent rally of white nationalists and neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, Va., which has had huge reverberations in Canada, inspiring a large antihate march in Vancouver, and a counterprotest that turned violent against a white supremacist march in Quebec City last weekend.
The reverberations of those events have played a major role in the past few episodes of "Watchmen," on top of the mythology exclusive to the show, which ties the true but widely forgotten story of the 1921 Tulsa massacre to Hooded Justice and the Cyclops conspiracy.
It may be impossible and foolhardy to empirically assign a particular sound or style to represent an entire decade, but you could do a lot worse than pinpointing the pulsating thrust of Trent Reznor's output in the 2010s as the defining reverberations of the last ten years.
In the slimmed-down West Wing, the struggle to contain or prepare for the reverberations of Trump's impulses seems to have replaced the rampant backbiting that went on before senior officials, like former chief of staff John Kelly, who tried to impose discipline and cohesion left.
Netscape, of course, helped turn its creator, Marc Andreessen, into a billionaire, and drove a Silicon Valley boom that we're still seeing reverberations of to this day—in part because Andreessen leveraged his financial success into further financial success and later, a plum role as a venture capitalist.
I have to imagine that even if you're doing the ol' iPhone in a Solo cup trick, that the thunderous reverberations that these producers are able to conjure out of just a few crisscrossing synth parts would still shake you—or at least shake the cup off the table.
Tariffs against Australia could also have broader reverberations, serving as a warning to Canada and Mexico, which recently saw tariffs on steel and aluminum lifted as part of a bid to secure congressional approval of the renegotiated trade agreement with those countries that the president signed last year.
While it's not yet clear whether we'll be talking about it -- or its reverberations -- in November, there's no doubt that Trump's decision and its impact on the broader Middle East will be a major topic of conversation in the run-up to the Iowa caucuses early next month.
A video published on Wednesday of a Google all-hands meeting in the days following the 2016 presidential election shows the company's senior leadership, including cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, CEO Sundar Pichai, and CFO Ruth Porat, reckoning with Donald Trump's shocking win and its reverberations around the world.
"As China's role in the global financial system grows, clear and timely communication of its policy decisions, transparency about its policy goals, and strategies consistent with achieving them will be increasingly important to avoid volatile market reactions with wider reverberations," the IMF said in parts of the report released on Monday.
But since this was Kalanick as the protagonist, it's 150 percent ickier and another public mess that is part of the continuing reverberations after a series of firings and departures related to issues of sexism and sexual harassment and what sounds like epically dysfunctional management systems at the much-funded startup.
The reverberations from that hostile takeover played out in elections in 2017: Ed Gillespie very nearly lost a Republican primary fight in the Virginia governor's race to an opponent who aligned himself closely to Trump while Roy Moore -- often described as "Trump before Trump" -- beat a sitting senator in Alabama.
That includes aircraft where you have fewer than 60 people on board … If you have an aircraft of 50 or so people being blown out of the sky there is going to be a great amount of panic and there will indeed be significant economic reverberations, and of course significant loss of life.
Political reverberations from the attacks also pulled the spotlight away from Obama's historic trip to lay the Cold War to rest in Cuba and threw new scrutiny on his approach to tackling ISIS and terrorism at home and abroad -- an examination that has deep implications in the election to find his successor.
Richard Burr and his wife sold as much as $1.7 million in stocks, roughly two weeks before the Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman delivered a private briefing on Capitol Hill in which he warned that the coronavirus -- and its potential reverberations societally -- were far larger than were presently being reported by the media.
" Los Angeles Times: Why Apple's fight with the FBI could have reverberations in China — "'This completely undermines privacy overseas and if the administration thinks this precedent wouldn't be used by China, Russia and others then they are in serious error,' said Nicholas Weaver, a senior researcher at the International Computer Science Institute at UC Berkeley.
And Friedl's intricately scaled models of homes built in the '60s in Cambodia, Vietnam, and the United States as a map of "modes of modernity" is an engaging project with little relation to Chen Chieh-jen's four-channel black-and-white video installation "Realm of Reverberations" (2014), which is shown in the adjacent room.
"While a number of investment banks have increased their internal probability models for a September hike, the interest rate markets have gone the other way and priced out the prospect," said Chris Weston, chief market strategist at brokerage firm IG. Weston explained the "reverberations of this re-pricing" was seen in the weaker dollar.
Levin thinks that Unite the Right has the potential to be an inflection point in the extremism world with longstanding reverberations, like the 1992 meeting that occurred in Estes Park, Colorado, and brought together dyed-in-the-wool Nazis, KKK members, gun nuts, tax protesters, and homeschooling advocates just before the siege in Waco, Texas.
More from Recode: But since this was Kalanick as the protagonist, it's 150 percent ickier and another public mess that is part of the continuing reverberations after a series of firings and departures related to issues of sexism and sexual harassment and what sounds like epically dysfunctional management systems at the much-funded startup.
With a sovereign bond market that now exceeds $2.5 trillion, making it the third largest sovereign market in the world, it is inconceivable that a default on Italy's sovereign bond market would not have major reverberations throughout the global financial system in much the same way as did the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008.
But it was not clear then whether Mr. Barr had simply gaffed — perhaps not understanding the reverberations that word choice would cause in a political news media environment that has changed drastically since his first stint as attorney general a quarter-century ago — or if he had deliberately set out to cause that effect.
But what transpires in 3.1 ripples out to other timelines, and we catch glimpses of these reverberations as we move, in the remaining chapters, through the minds of a deranged scientist, a homeless woman named Sarah, a murderous duck with a razor-sharp broken wing and a blue fox whose charisma radiates off the page.
The broad acceptance of this story line is evidenced not only by the measurably successful self-promotion of sporting associations and events like the World Cup, but also in the societal reverberations of shock and outrage when a sports star falls from grace, as though they were not fallible and flawed in the same way as us mere mortals.
Enlisting likeminded producers Roly Porter and Rabit, the producer born Nino Pedone set about making music that embodied the title's perceived dichotomy, exploring the ways we can find hope or peace in the midst of noise, love in the midst of chaos, sentiments that feel all the more pressing in light of the deafening reverberations of current events.
And despite recent talk of Athens being "the new Berlin," the city still struggles with poverty, riots and drug crime, not to mention continued reverberations of the refugee crisis — something perhaps most visible in Exarchia, where many migrants from war-torn countries in Africa and the Middle East live in squats run by anarchists and activists.
"If the national interest is given over to the extremes on the left or the right, if the voices of the moderate majority of Canadians are forgotten, the reverberations of that will tear at the fabric of Confederation for many, many years to come," Ms. Notley said on Monday, referring to the power-sharing system that Canada adopted in 1867.
Attorney General Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDOJ should take action against China's Twitter propaganda Lewandowski says he's 'happy' to testify before House panel The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy MORE went before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday as reverberations continue from the appearance of former FBI Director James Comey in front of the same panel last week.
MOSCOW — The reverberations from a leaked trove of Panamanian documents rippled through several nations on Thursday, with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia calling the exposure of a proliferation of shell companies and tax havens an American plot, while Iceland picked a new prime minister and Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain admitted that he had profited from an offshore trust.
What you see FAR less of in the coverage is conversations about the 22014(!) governor races on the ballot -- and the gains that Democrats are positioned to make in large population states, gains with huge reverberations not just in the 22010 presidential race but also in the decennial nationwide redistricting process that will begin in earnest after the 22014 Census is competed.
Republicans on Capitol Hill and beyond are worrying about the reverberations of the escalating feud between President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE and Sen.
The country — in part due to its tax structure — has become the home for a number of major tech companies — not just Microsoft, but Facebook, Google, Apple and many more — when setting up their international headquarters, covering global operations outside of the U.S., which means that regulatory questions that arise in Ireland over issues like data protection or paying taxes have larger reverberations beyond it.
As the 10 All Stars gather backstage and the top two queens, Roxxxy Andrews and Tatianna, deliberate on whom to send home, the discussion quickly pivots from talk of strategy (as Tatianna suggests) to the fact that sending home a beloved queen — or one who might be a threat down the line — could have reverberations outside the show, with angry fans going after them on social media and beyond.
House Democrats took the historic step Wednesday of impeaching President TrumpDonald John TrumpRepublican group targets Graham in ad calling for fair Senate trial Democratic presidential candidates react to Trump impeachment: 'No one is above the law' Trump attacks Schumer at fiery rally in Michigan MORE, a momentous move that will send long-lasting reverberations throughout the Capitol and the country, both already fiercely divided over the truculent figure in the Oval Office.
Previous administrations, under former President George W. Bush and former President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein Obama Former Bush official blasts Buttigieg: 'He is not ready' The Bill Clinton trial cannot serve as the model for the Donald Trump trial Trump says Iran 'appears to be standing down' in address to nation MORE, weighed action against the Iranian general and decided against it, in part because of worries that the reverberations could be too great.
But as he prepares to present himself as a seasoned patriarch who can lead the country in a smooth, classy way, unlike the current occupant of the Oval, he must grapple with the painful reality of his life as the head of a family that has messily spilled into the tabloids, a brood that is still brooding and suffering the reverberations of 46-year-old Beau Biden's death from brain cancer in 2015.
Meanwhile IHS' Dan Yergin noted that "if Brexit turns out to be a bigger shock to the U.K. economy and the European economy then the reverberations will be felt in the U.S." There are certain companies, such as those within the consumer goods sector, that are more exposed to the effects of a potentially harder Brexit — like higher product prices and dampened consumer demand, James Knightly, chief international economist at ING in London, told CNBC Wednesday.
Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE is raising questions about Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE's health as he grapples with low poll numbers and the reverberations from several controversies.

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