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29 Sentences With "minding the store"

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

It may very well be nothing, other than the honor of minding the store.
"One worries that no one is minding the store," Crider said in a statement.
Consequently, there was in effect nobody minding the store with regard to AIG's exposure to risk.
It's now past the time when we need to know with certainty who's minding the store.
While Toys R Us was minding the store, it admits that it fell behind on e-commerce.
Did her noumenal self take off for noumenal heaven and leave her phenomenal self minding the store?
Since 2009, when legislators first elected him speaker, he has been effectively minding the store of Texas.
"Minding the Store: A Big Story About a Small Business" by Julie Gaines, illustrated by Ben Lenovitz (Algonquin Books, $21.95).
The former Trump White House official in charge of cybersecurity, Tom Bossert, recently told Yahoo News that he was concerned no one was "minding the store" when it came to cybersecurity in the White House.
"Adam has spent years campaigning for governor, basically, in this position and the report was very concerning because it seemed like he wasn't minding the store when we needed him to be there," DeSantis told reporters at a campaign appearance in Pensacola.
Called "Who's Minding the Store" the report graded companies on a scale of zero to 260 points by looking at 608 different categories of action retailers could take, including chemical safety screening, ingredient disclosure, efforts to find safer alternatives and reporting the amount of "chemicals of high concern" the company has reduced or eliminated.
Those with an ~entrepreneurial~ spirit can get a behind-the-scenes look at being a business owner in Minding the Store: A Big Story About a Small Business by Julie Gaines and Ben Lenovitz — a graphic memoir about Fishs Eddy, the store which has become a beloved New York institution — or The Diary of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell, a memoir about the adventures of taking over a beloved bookshop.
And perhaps more than anything else, the devastating impact of the 2008 financial crisis, in which the reckless behavior of financial elites resulted in years of hardship for ordinary people all around the world, made all the previous assurances of experts ring hollow -- all those assurances that somehow financial regulators knew what they were doing, that somebody was minding the store, that global economic integration was an unadulterated good.
And perhaps more than anything else, the devastating impact of the 2008 financial crisis, in which the reckless behavior of financial elites resulted in years of hardship for ordinary people all around the world, made all the previous assurances of experts ring hollow — all those assurances that somehow financial regulators knew what they were doing, that somebody was minding the store, that global economic integration was an unadulterated good.
In his memoirs Marcus recalled, "Many women opened charge accounts just to become members of the club, and in a short time we had a membership of over 100,000, extending all over the country."Marcus, Minding the Store, p. 119.
Who's Minding the Store? is a 1963 American comedy film directed by Frank Tashlin and starring Jerry Lewis, Jill St. John, Agnes Moorehead, Ray Walston, Kathleen Freeman, and John McGiver. It was released on November 28, 1963, by Paramount Pictures.
Who's Minding the Store? was filmed from March 25 to May 22, 1963. The scene in which Fritz Feld feeds Lewis a delicacy of fried ants actually contained genuine fried ants, a fact that Lewis was unaware of until after the scene was over.
Cover of 2001 edition of Minding the Store, UNT Press In addition to writing a weekly column for The Dallas Morning News for 15 years, Marcus was the author of multiple retailing-oriented books, including Minding the Store: A Memoir (1974), the sequel Quest for the Best (1979),Quest for the Best: Texas A&M; University Press, 2001 paperback edition information. Retrieved 2008-05-23. and His & Hers: The Fantasy World of the Neiman Marcus Catalogue (1982)Farmer, p. 101. He was a close friend of other writers, including Jane Trahey, an author and longtime advertising copywriter who at one time worked for Neiman Marcus, and historian David McCullough.
While minding the store and toying with a pillbox, Bamberg invented his famous Okito box used to perform coin magic.Bobo, J.B: Okito coin box, page 217. Dover, 1982. Eventually, Bamberg returned to the road (playing vaudeville and variety theatres), selling his interest in the shop to Klein.
One day Ross was minding the store and being annoyed by a customer, he spat into his sandwich. This was captured on CCTV and Christian lost the franchise. Following this, Christian retained the lease on the premises and set up a Star Wars themed store, but this proved to be a failure. His marriage to Lauren ended in separation and he started drinking heavily.
Marcus used his public-relations skills once again when Dallas was labeled "City of Hate" following the November 22, 1963, assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy. An early supporter of Kennedy's run for the presidency, Marcus had tolerated the closing of several customers' accounts when he announced his support for the candidate in the 1960 elections.Biderman, p. 269.Minding the Store, p. 252.
Minding the Store is a 2005 reality TV show starring Pauly Shore. The show recounted Shore's efforts to revitalize his acting career and run the family business, The Comedy Store. Shore was helped by his staff, which included manager Dean Gelber, talent booker Tommy Morris, and handyman Marlon Hernandez. The show featured several comics, including Tommy Chong, Jay London, Marc Hatchell and Ari Shaffir.
The piece was featured in the Jerry Lewis film Who's Minding the Store (1963), although his first recorded performance was on a January 1954 episode of The Colgate Comedy Hour. The Radio 4 satirical programme The News Quiz has adopted the tune as its theme song. The original MS-DOS version of Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing! played a portion of the piece on startup.
At his new school, he became a member of the historically Jewish fraternity Zeta Beta Tau, later rising to become the group's president. While living in Boston and pursuing his chosen major, English literature,Minding the Store, p. 35. Marcus began a lifelong hobby of collecting rare and antique books. To finance his pursuits, he began The Book Collector's Service Bureau, a mail-order book service, beginning with a letter of introduction sent to 100 homes.
Minding the Store: A Memoir, 1974, pg. 39. According to research done in 2010 for the PBS series Faces of America by Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., of Harvard University, her great-grandfather, Elias Halaby, came to New York around 1891, one of the earliest Syrian immigrants to the United States. He was a Christian as well as having been a provincial treasurer (magistrate) as stated before by Najeeb Halaby in his autobiography "Crosswinds: an Airman's Memoir". He left Ottoman Syria with his two eldest sons.
Walston reprised his role in the 1958 film version of Damn Yankees. His other films included Kiss Them for Me, South Pacific, Say One for Me, Tall Story, Portrait in Black, The Apartment, Convicts 4, Wives and Lovers, Who's Minding the Store?, Kiss Me, Stupid, Caprice, Paint Your Wagon, The Sting, Silver Streak, and Get a Clue. Walston landed one of the three leading roles in Billy Wilder's comic farce Kiss Me, Stupid opposite Dean Martin and Kim Novak because, after six weeks of filming, Peter Sellers had to withdraw from the cast due to a heart attack.
Fishs Eddy was founded in 1986, when founders and current owners Julie Gaines and David Lenovitz got lost in Upstate New York and stumbled upon a small town named Fishs Eddy. Gaines and Lenovitz discovered an old barn during that trip that had stockpiled restaurant dishware that had survived a fire. They offered to buy the whole lot, took it back to their apartment in Manhattan and used the inventory to open a store at 889 Broadway, near Union Square. A graphic novel about the history of the story, by Gaines and illustrated by her and Lenovitz's son, called Minding the Store was published in 2018.
Harold Stanley Marcus"Personal" (column), The Dallas Morning News, November 9, 1905, page 5. (April 20, 1905 – January 22, 2002) was president (1950–1972) and later chairman of the board (1972–1976) of the luxury retailer Neiman Marcus in Dallas, Texas, which his father and aunt had founded in 1907. During his tenure at the company, he also became a published author, writing his memoir Minding the Store and also a regular column in The Dallas Morning News. After Neiman Marcus was sold to Carter Hawley Hale Stores, Marcus initially remained in an advisory capacity to that company, but later began his own consulting business, which continued until his death.
It is largely considered to be Lewis' finest and most memorable film (selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2004 as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant", spawned a 2008 sequel and a 2012 stage musical adaptationJones, Kenneth. "Producers of Nutty Professor Hope to Earn Broadway Tenure for New Marvin Hamlisch-Rupert Holmes Show", Playbill, August 17, 2012, accessed August 19, 2013). He then appeared in a cameo role in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), then in Tashlin's Who's Minding the Store? (1963) and hosted The Jerry Lewis Show, a lavish 13-week, big-budget show which aired on ABC from September to December in 1963, but suffered in the ratings and was beleaguered by technical and other difficulties, including the assassination of then U.S. president John F. Kennedy, which left the country in a somber mood. Lewis next starred in The Patsy (1964), his satire about the Hollywood star-making industry, The Disorderly Orderly (1964), his final collaboration with Tashlin and The Family Jewels (1965) about a young heiress who must choose among six uncles, one of whom is up to no good and out to harm the girl's beloved bodyguard who practically raised her.

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