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"eyeshade" Definitions
  1. a visor that shields the eyes from strong light and is fastened on with a headband

33 Sentences With "eyeshade"

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

Here's what else is happening: Bring your calculator and green eyeshade.
The green-eyeshade process must not be permitted to block an American prosperity renaissance.
The agency's idea was to bring specialists together and form a kind of green-eyeshade-wearing Delta Force.
The green-eyeshade origin story of Donald Trump's finances is debt and losses and money gifted from Dad.
Another option is to wear a hoodie on the plane and convert it to a neck pillow/eyeshade when it's time to sleep.
In three of the sessions, the subject was given an MDMA pill and laid on a couch with an eyeshade while the drug took effect.
On the way home, I stopped in New York to present these possibilities to William Shawn, to whom I have alluded as The New Yorker's supreme eyeshade.
After submission, it is the turn of the government green-eyeshade types to work long hours asking the usual array of questions about accuracy, completeness and all the rest.
After all, conservatives don't design tax cuts or military spending with this kind of green-eyeshade obsession with who's deserving and who isn't — why should progressives shackle themselves like this?
His chapter on the goings-on at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is a textbook example of the sort of green-eyeshade reportage on which he built his formidable reputation.
A new coalition of budget watchdogs tell Whispers that they plan to unveil a new award today that will reward the best and the brightest of the green eyeshade crowd.
Despite the fact that the green eyeshade wearers declared the recession "over" in 6900, the recovery was both too slow and uneven for average Americans to feel secure for years following.
They favor tax hikes, mainly on the rich, to reverse the huge 22019 Republican tax cuts, but there's less premium on the green eyeshade test of paying for all spending initiatives.
Much of his attention is on City Hall, with a green-eyeshade description of his methodical approach to dealing with 1,000 shuttered homes or increasing the efficiency of picking up the trash.
Unfortunately, they also resorted to some accounting gimmicks that helped them appease the green-eyeshade crowd at the CBO but failed to generate actual revenue – and could impose big new costs on a number of individuals and businesses.
And if Brohm continues to excite fans and win games, more sellouts and donations could follow, meaning that from a green-eyeshade perspective, the "dead money" of the Hazell buyout could come to seem more like a successful investment in the program's future.
One offers something like what the president promised on the campaign trail — a break with Paul Ryan's green-eyeshade approach to entitlement reform, a more moderate tack on health care, an indifference to Obama-era conservative orthodoxies on fiscal and monetary policy.
Messrs Blair and Cameron fused social liberalism and economic liberalism together and then added managerialism to the mixture; organisations such as the Audit Commission applied the green eyeshade to the various instruments of the welfare state in a way that would have made Mr Gradgrind proud.
To be sure, the meeting remains a somewhat green-eyeshade affair, and there is no shortage of agreement on certain matters; after belated revelations that Russian hackers breached at least one state's election computers, the secretaries were united in calling for the federal government to tell them when their data is at risk.
Note that the published valuations are largely irrelevant in terms of market behavior, as distinct from the demands of green-eyeshade accounting minutia, because no one should believe that the investment community fails to recognize that changes in prices yield up-and-down movements in the quantity of reserves that can be produced profitably.
She has worked at The Miami News, The Palm Beach Post and most recently, The Miami Herald. For her journalism work, she was awarded a National Headliner, a Clarion Award, a Green Eyeshade and two Sunshine State Awards.
Florida Trend has won numerous national and regional awards, including the Gerald Loeb award and the Society for Professional Journalists' Green Eyeshade awards for investigative reporting and commentary. In 2011, Florida Trend won two Green Eyeshade awards — first place for general news reporting for "Medical Makeover" and second place for investigative reporting about Florida's role in international adoptions. The Alliance of Area Business Publications (AABP) has honored Florida Trend several times. Florida Trend received eight AABP Editorial Excellence awards in 2011, nine in 2012, ten awards in 2013, seven awards in 2014, five awards in 2015, four in 2016, seven in 2018, and five in 2019.
The paper's reporters have won several major awards, including the George Polk Award, the Investigative Reporters and Editors Award (finalist), the Green Eyeshade Award for the South's best journalism (second place, 2004 and 2005), the Baltimore Suns H.L. Mencken Writing Award, and the Casey Medal for Meritorious Journalism.
Jacob H. Fries (born 1978) is an American journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the St. Petersburg Times, the Seattle Times, and The Pacific Northwest Inlander, among other publications.Bio at The Pacific Northwest Inlander His articles are usually on the topics of law and criminality. In 2006, he spent 48 hours locked up with inmates at an overcrowded county jail in Pinellas County, Florida, producing a special report"Burden on the Block" special report for the St. Petersburg Times, which won a Green Eyeshade Award.2007 Green Eyeshade Award Winner An articleArticle on Todd Carmichael he wrote on Todd Carmichael, who set a world record trekking across Antarctica, was excerpted in The Week.
Returning to the United States, Cengel joined the Louisville Courier-Journal as a general assignment features reporter. Her series on the families of the Lost Boys of Sudan received second place feature writing from the Society of Professional Journalists 2005 Green Eyeshade Award. Cengel teaches journalism at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and UC Berkeley Extension.
Anderson never wrote another musical, preferring instead to continue writing orchestral miniatures. His pieces, including "The Typewriter", "Bugler's Holiday", and "A Trumpeter's Lullaby" are performed by orchestras and bands ranging from school groups to professional organizations. Anderson would occasionally appear on the Boston Pops regular concerts on PBS to conduct his own music while Fiedler would sit on the sidelines. For "The Typewriter" Fiedler would don a green eyeshade, roll up his sleeves, and mime working on an old typewriter while the orchestra played.
Most of the characters have found idiomatic usage in Bengali language, which is true for many of Ray's works. Some of the main characters are: ;Shree Kakkeshwar kuchkuche (): A raven/crow who wears a clerk's green eyeshade while performing mathematics. ;Gechhodada (): A character that is only alluded to by the cat but never appears in the story. he is completely unpredictable, and according to the cat, can only be found solving a very complicated, irrational and nonsensical mathematics, which depends on many probabilities about where Gechodada can be that moment.
In 2006, staff photographer Bernard Troncale took top honors at the Society of Professional Journalists' Green Eyeshade Awards for his work on a series about AIDS in Africa. In 2006 the News editorial staff were finalists for another Pulitzer for Editorial Writing for a series of editorials reversing the paper's longstanding support of the death penalty. That same year the paper won two Awards of Excellence from the Society for News Design for the paper's overall graphic layout. In 2007, reporter Brett Blackledge won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for his series of articles exposing corruption in Alabama's two-year college system.
Bersia previously served as a Foreign-Affairs Columnist for McClatchy-Tribune Information Services and the Orlando Sentinel, as well as on the latter's Editorial Board. He won the first Pulitzer Prize of the 21st century for the Orlando Sentinel, as well as for its parent organization, the Tribune Company. Additionally, he was the recipient of the Walker Stone Award of the Scripps Howard Foundation, the first-place “Green Eyeshade” editorials award of the Society of Professional Journalists, the annual Media Award for Editorial Excellence of The National Association of Consumer Advocates and other national awards. Before his journalism experience, Bersia worked in the global political-risk analysis and publishing businesses, as well as for the U.S. government.
Walter F. Bauer (1924–2015), the main founder of Informatics, was from Michigan and earned a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Michigan in 1951. His early work was at the Michigan Aeronautical Research Center; the National Bureau of Standards, where he programmed the early digital SEAC computer; and for Boeing's BOMARC interceptor missile. He became a manager at the Ramo- Wooldridge Corporation in charge of a unit with 400 employees and two computers, an IBM 704 and a UNIVAC 1103A, and in 1958 joined the merged Thompson Ramo Wooldridge company. Bauer later said that he "was never a green eyeshade programmer" nor a "strong technologist", but being a systems person and a manager gave him a good grasp of computer systems and their capabilities.
Hullinger is the recipient of multiple awards and honors. Jeff has been inducted into the Southeast Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Silver Circle. He is a 19 time Emmy Award winner; the most ever of any Atlanta Sports anchor, has been recognized multiple times at "Best of Atlanta", has been 3 times awarded "Best Play by Play" in the State of Georgia by the Associated Press as the voice of the Atlanta Falcons, and is Georgia "Sportscaster of the Year" by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. In both 2007 and 2008 he was a finalist at the Society of Professional Journalists annual "Green Eyeshade" Awards: In 2007 for Radio - "Best Newscast" and Radio - "Breaking News", and 2008 for Radio - "Best Newscast" and Radio - "Breaking News".
These experimental fluoroscopes were simply thin cardboard screens that had been coated on the inside with a layer of fluorescent metal salt, attached to a funnel-shaped cardboard eyeshade which excluded room light with a viewing eyepiece which the user held up to his eye. The fluoroscopic image obtained in this way was quite faint. Even when finally improved and commercially introduced for diagnostic imaging, the limited light produced from the fluorescent screens of the earliest commercial scopes necessitated that a radiologist sit for a period in the darkened room where the imaging procedure was to be performed, to first accustom his eyes to increase their sensitivity to perceive the faint image. The placement of the radiologist behind the screen also resulted in significant dosing of the radiologist.
In 1998, Hillyer joined the editorial desk at the Mobile Register, gaining widespread acclaim for his coverage of statewide politics and its effect on the city as a whole, receiving the Carmage Walls Commentary Award from the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association and the Green Eyeshade Award for commentary from the Society of Professional Journalists. Hillyer returned to Washington in 2006, serving as a managing director at Qorvis Communications, and executive editor of The American Spectator before assuming the post of Associate Editorial Page Editor at The Washington Examiner in 2008. From 2009 through 2011, he was a senior editorial writer at The Washington Times. He remains a senior editor and columnist at the Spectator. Hillyer’s articles have appeared in many publications, including the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, National Review, the New Republic, The Guardian (UK), and Investor’s Business Daily.

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