For instance, I left my phone and iPad chargers in the wall when I left, plugged in and dangling, and returned to find the cords neatly bundled and tied with bows of ribbon.
There was a fun pitch under a huge roof where I had to climb into a corner, then lower myself down the rope and run back and forth on the wall until I could catch the edge of the next crack system.
Because, still, like, I'll go in, and I'll download The Wall Street Journal and I'll read The Wall Street Journal on my iPad.
When the stapler hit the wall, I had been in the operating room for more than four hours, struggling to remove a diseased segment of colon from someone I'll call Mr. Baker, a 330-pound middle-aged man.
And I guess the main concern I have about the future of Wall Street is that I just hope that the United States has learned some lessons.
By midafternoon, I was sweating all over and my pulse was racing, so I decided to rest on a long bench by the wall, but I tripped and fell before I could reach it.
And in fact, I read The Wall Street Journal more frequently than I did when I only had paper because it's so convenient now.
As I got out to the blocks, everything from that point on became a blur up until the point when I hit the wall and turned to see my face on the big screen.
When I was a young science writer at the Wall Street Journal, I sat in the cubicle across from Jerry Bishop.
For instance, if I were preparing for an interview at The Wall Street Journal, I could use Graph Search to find which of my friends and friends of friends worked there.
So that very first DNA fingerprint, which I can see in front of me right now on the wall of my office--I still have the original--a very murky, grubby bit of X-ray film.
But this made him the de facto narrator of the story, ruining the "fly on the wall" effect I wanted.
WSJ: Manil Suri, Author of The Death of Vishnu, on Narrators | Word Craft
The Wall Street reforms I signed into law are helping bring energy markets out of the shadows and under real oversight.
WHITEHOUSE: Weekly Address: Ending Subsidies for Big Oil Companies
At the Wall Street Journal I edited economics and business stories from around Asia and spent the handover cooped up in the office.
However, I hit the wall in both my last two races, and I'm terrified it will happen again this Sunday.
As I noted earlier this month, it was the least liked stock by Wall Street and as I posted on January 20, the weekly technical studies were strong.
Some of this does seem to be getting through to the young people I saw scaling the climbing wall.
There have been no monumental changes in the way Wall Street conducts business since I started in the industry a quarter century ago.
This is my last turn at the helm of WSJ. (I move to a new berth with The Wall Street Journal in London this month), and I want to thank all of you for your indulgence, particularly those who took the time to email comments (good and bad).
When I touched my hand against the Western Wall and placed my prayer between its ancient stones, I thought of all the centuries that the children of Israel had longed to return to their ancient homeland.
I've been joking lately that my room is exactly the same as it was -- my mother still has the house -- same bed sheets, same pictures on the wall, flowered pictures I bought when I was 16.
The portfolio measured about two feet by a foot and a half, too big to fit into the drawers of our bedroom dresser or to be stacked upright against the wall in the crowded bedroom closet he and I shared.
The first time she had visited my room, she had, after examining my meagre shelf of books, spent several minutes studying the mimeographed photo of Samuel Beckett sitting on the terrace of the Closerie des Lilas that I had taped to the wall.
"It's something I usually keep hanging on the wall, but it's the only weapon I have, " said Bonelli, 23.
In a weird sense, I disassociated stocks from the greedy Wall Street suits and linked it to things I understand.
FORBES: Blame Congress, Not Facebook IPO, For Americans Souring On Stocks
And so I completed my poster, and I hung it on the wall of my home office just above my desk, so I could see it whenever I sat at my computer.
FORBES: The Magic of the 2013 Goal Poster...You'll Have to Read It To Believe It!
For the better part of a day, I chipped away at the wall, blistering my hands and flattening the head of the chisel until it looked like a mushroom.
The U.S. editors I wrote for accepted the Berlin Wall as something permanent and geological, like a mountain range.
The producers wanted to capture a fly-on-the-wall documentary style so even though I was allowed to read a script, the interview scenes themselves were improvised around a specific scenario.
BBC: Actor Andy Shields as Inspector Clive Turner in the film
As part of my research for my book, Backstage Wall Street, I delved deep into the history and folklore of Wall Street.
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