Candace Parker isn’t quite putting up the flashy numbers of Wilson and Stewart, but she is every bit as important to her team and is a critical reason the Los Angeles Sparks are 10-3 and in contention for the top seed.
There’s No WNBA All-Star Game This Year, But We Picked The Rosters Anyway|Howard Megdal|August 26, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
A key figure on the Times’ digital rejuvenation, Wilson had been the bridge between the business side and the news side.
‘Unstoppable innovator’: The meteoric rise of Meredith Kopit Levien, the next New York Times CEO|Steven Perlberg|August 19, 2020|Digiday
That means whatever freelance job Wilson takes on will need to allow for flexibility with hours as well as remote work.
‘They need to model empathy’: Agency workers prepare for the start to a most unusual school year|Kristina Monllos|August 18, 2020|Digiday
Wilson isn’t alone in the fear that agencies won’t be as flexible for parents this fall.
‘They need to model empathy’: Agency workers prepare for the start to a most unusual school year|Kristina Monllos|August 18, 2020|Digiday
It was confusing because of how hard it would be to get all of those players enough shots, as well as the fact that McCoughtry, a 29 percent career 3-point shooter, would not exactly space the floor for Wilson and Cambage inside.
Will The Mystics Repeat? Will The Storm Surge? What To Watch In The WNBA Bubble.|Jenn Hatfield|July 23, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
Wilson famously said “what was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa.”
The Left’s Answer to ALEC|Ben Jacobs|December 15, 2014|DAILY BEAST
On October 5, 2013, Wilson pointed a pistol at a postal clerk.
Post Office Robbers More Wanted Than ISIS|M.L. Nestel|December 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Five days later authorities were able to match a fingerprint at the post office to Wilson sending him to an early retirement.
Post Office Robbers More Wanted Than ISIS|M.L. Nestel|December 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The contrast with the Wilson grand jury is a stunning illustration of the racial double standards in criminal justice.
We Need More Ferguson-style Grand Juries|Kaimipono Wenger|November 30, 2014|DAILY BEAST
That McCulloch failed to obtain an indictment of Wilson means only one thing: He did not want to obtain an indictment.
Prosecutor Used Grand Jury to Let Darren Wilson Walk|Tom Nolan|November 28, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Wilson has written to the Sultan a letter full of advice, and he says the Turks will be more powerful than ever.
The Greville Memoirs|Charles C. F. Greville
President Wilson, who used occasionally to spend his vacation in the Lake region, was one of his friends.
The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume I|Burton J. Hendrick
Mr. Wilson is going to bring some samples of paper over to the Publishing House soon and let us make our selections.
The Blue Birds' Winter Nest|Lillian Elizabeth Roy
Wilson faced the vigorous form in the helmet and rubber overcoat.
The Web of the Golden Spider|Frederick Orin Bartlett
In due course of time a fat check from Wilson finds its way into the coffers of the "Holy Moses" promoters.
Twenty Years a Detective in the Wickedest City in the World|Clifton R. Wooldridge
British Dictionary definitions for Wilson
Wilson
/ (ˈwɪlsən) /
noun
Alexander. 1766–1813, Scottish ornithologist in the US
Sir Angus (Frank Johnstone). 1913–91, British writer, whose works include the collection of short stories The Wrong Set (1949) and the novels Anglo-Saxon Attitudes (1956) and No Laughing Matter (1967)
Charles Thomson Rees. 1869–1959, Scottish physicist, who invented the cloud chamber: shared the Nobel prize for physics 1927
Edmund. 1895–1972, US critic, noted esp for Axel's Castle (1931), a study of the symbolist movement
(James) Harold, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx. 1916–95, British Labour statesman; prime minister (1964–70; 1974–76)
Jacqueline . born 1945, British writer for older girls; her best-selling books include The Story of Tracey Beaker (1991), The Illustrated Mum (1998), and Girls in Tears (2002).
Richard. 1714–82, Welsh landscape painter
(Thomas) Woodrow (ˈwʊdrəʊ). 1856–1924, US Democratic statesman; 28th president of the US (1913–21). He led the US into World War I in 1917 and proposed the Fourteen Points (1918) as a basis for peace. Although he secured the formation of the League of Nations, the US Senate refused to support it: Nobel peace prize 1919
American zoologist who was one of the founders of modern genetics. He researched the function, structure, and organization of cells, emphasizing their importance as the building blocks of life. He also demonstrated the significance of chromosomes, especially sex chromosomes, in heredity.
Scientific definitions for Wilson (2 of 2)
Wilson
[ wĭl′sən ]
Charles Thomson Rees1869-1959
See more at cloud chamber.
British physicist noted for his research on atmospheric electricity. He developed the Wilson cloud chamber, a device that makes it possible to study and photograph the movement and interaction of electrically charged particles. He shared the 1927 Nobel Prize for physics with Arthur Compton.