Sentences with phrase «at least the book on»

At least the book on wenger as a 4th place failure can be closed... He is that and until he leaves arsenal will never win top trophies... Only the sad people on this site fail to realize this... Even a draws is irrelevant now
While looking around online is a good start, you'll probably also need to consult a legal professional, or at least some books on the subject.

Not exact matches

A thought - provoking post on Business Insider gathers evidence from Newport's book and elsewhere that the Microsoft founder was — in his youth at least — a true master of deep work.
Slywotzky's book takes readers under the hood of companies that fire on all pistons, at least as far as exciting consumers is concerned.
In researching for his upcoming book on fulfilling work, Schulich's Burke found that Johnson & Johnson saw at least a $ 4 return on every dollar it spent on employee wellness initiatives in terms of lower health - care costs, less absenteeism and higher productivity.
There are many good books on this subject, and you owe it to yourself to read at least one of them before you begin talking to angels.
«If I suck at screenwriting,» he concluded, «at least I can fall back on writing a book about screenwriting.»
I watched it at least four times, laughed, then shared it via email, social media and even made bets with fellow television producers on which show was going to book James Wright Chanel first.
Author Elizabeth Royte writes in her book, «Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought it,» that 92 % of the nation's 53,000 local water systems meet or exceed federal safety standards and are at least as clean and often cleaner than bottled water.
Pleased But Not Satisfied and an article on Sir Alex Ferguson «I like to have at least one key book and one print article to read for takeoffs and landings, when you [are asked] to shut down your electrical devices.
When you stay at a hotel within The Hotel Collection, you will receive a $ 75 credit for on - site dining, spa, and resort activities when you book a prepaid stay of at least two consecutive nights at participating properties.
After spending at least 34 months on one or more Amazon.com bestseller lists (Environment, Green Business, Business), the award - winning book Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green was taken out of print by the publisher.
Removing those companies (just 3 in this case) that each had at least a 5 % impact on the r - squared value, along with the companies that had negative book values, reveals a weak, 27 %, correlation.
But judging of the failure vs. expectations of the SNAP and Blue Apron IPOs, private equity investments are likely over-marked on the books by at least 15 - 20 %.
When starting a small business, there are all sorts of things to learn, and most first - time business owners have probably gone through at least three or four different books on -LSB-...]
It would be great to see the author maintain an up to date set of data (or at least checked links) on his website for the book and guarantee to do this for as long as the book is on sale at least.
Finally we come to the least valued US large bank, Citigroup (NYSE: C), which currently trades at 0.80 x book on a beta of 1.6.
They define value as high book - to - market ratio based on book value lagged at least four months.
One thing I found really interesting is that one conclusion the book came to is that these «faith wars» had a direct impact on the fall of the Roman Empire because the gov» t had to deal with the internal struggle and the external enemies had to take a back seat in importance or at least drastically distracted the leadership.
The CEO, Kathryn, in Patrick Lencioni's book, The Five Dysfunctions of a Team, says, I think my biggest strength, at least the strength that will have the biggest impact on our success, is my...
I've never recommended an eBook before, but I'll happily note that the glorious color in the eBook edition of Roman Pilgrimage may yet convert me to reading -(at - least - some - books)- on - a-tablet, a confession this veteran paper guy never expected to make.
Still, at the end of the day, when the atrocities in Bosnia and elsewhere make one despair of human perfectibility, of moderation, of a universal moral law based on reason, reading so fine, learned, and humane a book is, if not a consolation, at least a relief.
A book called Disinformation, co-written by General Pacepa and the American professor of law Ronald Rychlak (best known for his book Hitler, the War and the Pope, a well - researched defence of Pius XII's record during the Second World War), which spells out these revelations at greater length, is «dubious at best» — or at least, the bits written by Pacepa are: the reviewer NCR admits that «what Rychlak contributes, drawn from his earlier work on Pope Pius, appears solid».
The past two years have seen the appearance of an informative Encyclopedia of the American Constitution (4 vols., edited by Leonard W. Levy [Macmillan]-RRB-, several outstanding studies on its intellectual background (including Forrest McDonald's Novus Ordo Seculorum: The Intellectual Origins of the Constitution [University Press of Kansas] and Morton White's Philosophy, The Federalist, and the Constitution [Oxford University Press], at least one pathbreaking effort to trace the document's role through the years (Michael Kammen's A Machine That Would Go of Itself The Constitution in American Culture [Knopf]-RRB- and a gaggle of good books on its religious themes (see Martin Marty's review in The Century [«James Madison Revisited,» April 9.
On the one hand, persons who have tried to pray without getting very far with it are apt to feel that if only someone would teach them — give them a book of instructions, or a course, or at least a lecture or two — the difficulties would all be cleared away.
There is something of a boom going on these days in Melville studies, with Kelley's book and at least half a dozen other major academic monographs appearing from university presses, and with two new full - length biographies published last year: Laurie Robertson - Lorant's relatively unimportant but informative Melville: A Biography (Potter, 752 pages,, $ 40) and the first volume of the endlessly detailed Herman Melville (Johns Hopkins University Press, 941 pages,, $ 39.95) by Hershel Parker, the grand old man of Melville studies.
According to a 1994 essay in the New York Review of Books by John Maynard Smith, the dean of British neo-Darwinists, «the evolutionary biologists with whom I have discussed his [Gould's] work tend to see him as a man whose ideas are so confused as to be hardly worth bothering with, but as one who should not be publicly criticized because he is at least on our side against the creationists.
I found Wilfred M. McClay's essay on the book A Secular Age by Charles Taylor (May 2008) interesting, but it seems to me that a crucial element is missing from Taylor's thesis» at least as it is described by McClay» and that is a grappling with the disturbing emergence of a profound antihumanism that is growing like a virulent cancer out of the secular mindset.
Some of the best Bible scholars of the past and present never would teach or preach on any book of the Bible until they had read it through at least 60 or 100 times.
Well devin, at least I don't rely on a book written 2000 years ago for my truth.
So, Heather, if you made any comment at all on the idea, the final product will be partly «yours» and you will deserve at least an acknowledgement if and when the book is ever published!
I just finished a book on a new form of psychological therapy that has at least four chapters with demons in a chapter title.
At least atheists base all of what they believe on reason and evidence, rather than a book that was written by uneducated people during the Bronze Age.
The fact that biblical scholars, many of whom have made it their full - time job to study the origins of the many books of the Bible, can't agree on it's authenticity should at least leave you with some doubt about it's authenticity.
In the months ahead, at least two other books on the Pope will likely be making their appearance, at which time we hope to run a review article that will also deal with the Szulc book in greater detail.
David Hubbard, for example, in his taped remarks on the future of evangelicalism to a colloquium at Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary in Denver in 1977 noted the following areas of tension among evangelicals: women's ordination, the charismatic movement, ecumenical relations, social ethics, strategies of evangelism, Biblical criticism, Biblical infallibility, contextual theology in non-Western cultures, and the churchly applications of the behavioral sciences.2 If such a list is more exhaustive than those topics which this book has pursued, it nevertheless makes it clear that the foci of the preceding chapters have at least been representative.
The contention within Christian hip - hop (under the hashtag abbreviation CHH on Twitter) community of how to present Christianity within music can be traced back at least 25 years, to when fans and fellow artists tended to align with either Cross Movement, a group who claimed to «rap the Gospel,» almost exclusively at shows held in churches and on CDs sold in Christian book stores, or Tunnel Rats, an LA crew whose music took plotted a more mainstream course.
Reading is a skill or at least an activity, and few ventures are as disheartening as trying to get through books on the Bible by Southern Baptist Fundamentalists, such as Harold Lindsell's The Battle for the Bible (I 976).
There is at least one video on the web, in addition to the book.
We hear much of «the silence of God,» and Jacques Ellul, a distinguished French lay theologian, has written a book entitled Hope in Time of Abandonment in which he presents evidence from the state of society and the church that God seems at least temporarily to have turned his back on the world.
So at least until May, expect Mondays to include a few more interviews, guest posts, reflections, and book reviews on this topic.
Each christian should read this book or be at least familiar with the goals of Islam and just not rely on the news media which does not routinely address this topic.
C'm on, Ed... if you wan na call the Koran a «book of terror», at least be fair and look at the Bible in the same light.
While we may not be able to extricate ourselves from either our consumer culture or our heritage in print, at least we can begin to liberate ourselves from our reliance on books and paper in our worship by recovering skills of memorization, recitation, and narration.
Pete If you are referring to the inaccurate statement from the Smithsonian that atheists love to post regarding the Bible at least read the entire letter which excludes this: `... On the other hand, much of the Bible, in particular the historical books of the old testament, are as accurate historical documents as any that we have from antiquity and are in fact more accurate than many of the Egyptian, Mesopotamian, or Greek histories.
Roger Boesche is not among the top ten Tocqueville scholars in my opinion, but he probably deserves to be in the top fifteen or at least twenty; he has at least three serious books on Tocqueville I can recall off - hand, the most well known being The Strange Liberalism of Alexis de Tocqueville, and....
Jesus the Son of Marry (Peace and blessings be up on him) is known today to the Christian world as it is being described by John, Paul, Luke and others... whatever the way these human imagined him became the faith... record shows that the first book of NT was written at least 60 - 80 years after Jesus the son of Marry was taken away from this earth... and these writers used their vision as a weapon to get it to the brain of mankind... also there are debates among the Christian scholars that no one knows who is the writer of some of the gospels... someone else wrote it and used the names what we see today... i.e. no one knows when and who and how the Hebrew chapters were written... despite of lots of controversy on this, Christian scholars uses them to teach others...
For some reason, the May issue's Public Square chose to pick two sentences out of my review of Jefferson Powell's book on the Supreme Court and twist those few words to portray both Powell and me as at least «confused» and perhaps as defenders of an imperial judiciary.
This is, of course, the issue addressed on a more personal level in Rabbi Harold Kushner's highly popular When Bad Things Happen to Good People, reassessing a conflict at least as ancient as the biblical Book of Job.
This book, indeed, virtually recognizes, or at least confirms, the point that I am making in this present essay, for the author explicitly states in his Preface that the reader should turn to other (earlier) books for the data of the religions, while he is moving on from these to proffer an interpretation of those data (cf. his note 1 to chap.
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