Word: childrenã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...100th time, we would venture out into the neighborhood on our bikes. Naturally athletic (and a future volleyball and track superstar), Jenny rode around hands-free on her cool bike—Titanic-style—while I, on the other hand, still had a bright pink children??s bike. Complete with training wheels...
...this subtext to focus on an underexposed subject: the roughly 1.5 million adolescents who flee their homes every year in North America. But despite its shimmering surface, Bock’s novel ultimately crumbles under the burden of the visual medium it seeks to explore.“Beautiful Children?? begins with the recounting of a recounting: Bock painstakingly describes the last filmed moments of Newell Ewing, a snotty 12-year-old reared by Las Vegas suburbanites, before he disappears into the oblivion of the Nevada desert. There is clear fixation with recordings: a stripper becomes comfortable with...
...year, the richest woman in Britain joins an exclusive club, alongside luminaries like Prof. John Huston Finley, the Harvard classicist who delivered the 1982 speech, and publisher Louis B. Martin, the 1970 speaker. Neither has a Wikipedia entry dedicated to him, but at least they weren’t children??s book authors...
...piece of information is that everybody who was depressed was also burned out, whereas the reverse is not true,” said Amy M. Fahrenkopf, a pediatrician at Children??s Hospital Boston and the lead author of the study. “Residency does lead to the state of being burned out and for some people, that’s a trigger that leads to depression...
Fahrenkopf—who examined groups of pediatric residents at three different children??s hospitals from around the country—said she suspects that poor treatment of residents on the job may be to blame for the high rate of burn...