Sentences with phrase «juri steiner»

«It didn't make sense that these very popular books, which I know are quite good, aren't on the silver screen,» says Jeffrey Steiner, president and CEO of New Franchise Media.
The plaintiffs» lawyer, Brian Brook, told the Post that the emails prove «Manning was looking to give non-game-used helmets to Steiner to satisfy — fraudulently — his contractual obligation.»
The evidence is part of a lawsuit filed against Manning, the New York Giants, Giants equipment manager Joe Skiba, Giants owner John Mara, and Steiner Sports, a large memorabilia company.
«If we were good friends and I gave you cash — not because of a contract but because of our close friendship — then that's a gift,» said Bruce Steiner, who is of counsel at Kleinberg Kaplan Wolff & Cohen in New York.
A longtime Conservative, Steiner entertained the author more than two decades ago when Archer was deputy chairman of the U.K. Conservative Party.
Dan Steiner is an entrepreneur, Internet - marketing expert and author from San Luis Obispo, Calif..
Carnegie Mellon is teaming up with Steiner Studios to create a graduate program that will fuse coursework in the humanities and sciences with the latest digital technology.
«This is a crisis for the future of recycling,» David Steiner, the CEO of Waste Management, says.
But Steiner says he doesn't foresee a day in which Waste Management is out of the recycling business altogether.
«It takes a crisis to get action sometimes in politics,» Steiner says.
Steiner says he still doesn't see a bottom to the price decline.
Steiner has threatened in the pages of The Wall Street Journal and elsewhere that, if no solutions are found, the end of recycling could be nigh.
Steiner rattled off ideas like national legislation requiring a certain amount of recycled content to be used in packaging of new products, or removing glass from the recycling stream because it often breaks during collection and mucks up the rest of the load.
Henry Steiner Founder, Steiner & Co. «The redesign is brilliantly simple.
Many of the environmentalists who responded angrily to Steiner beseech readers to, as the Minneapolis non-profit wrote, «think about «profits» a little more broadly» to include the job creation and environmental benefits that recycling brings.
Steiner conceded that it was «probably fair» to say Waste Management created some of its own problems by leading the single - stream recycling trend.
Meanwhile, Steiner is focusing on educating people to recycle properly — a crusade that will not only revive stalling recycling rates in the country, but shore up the company's profits.
«I've never seen him fly anything but economy,» adds management consultant Doug Steiner.
«Steiner's assault will bring it under control.»
But don't take my word for it — Forbes» Christopher Steiner cited St. Louis as «The Right Way To Build a Tech City,» the city was ranked as the top startup city by Popular Mechanics in 2015, the fastest growing startup city by Business Insider and the «new startup frontier» by FiveThirtyEight in 2016.
Since 2006 (the first year in the ProxyMonitor.org database), the three most frequent sponsors of shareholder proposals at Fortune 250 companies have been corporate gadflies: John Chevedden (including, in earlier years, his family trust and now - deceased father, Ray); William Steiner (and son, Kenneth); and Evelyn Davis.
Dan Steiner is an entrepreneur, author, and marketing influencer.
«While we anticipated significant losses, learning the extent of the devastation to the regional economy exceeded our worst fears,» said Steiner.
For example, books reviewed in the first months of 1910 included Herbert Croly's The Promise of American Life; Education in the Far East, by Charles F. Thwing; a philosophical study titled Religion and the Modern Mind, by Frank Carleton Doan; Jane Addams's The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets; The Immigrant Tide, by Edward Steiner; Medical Inspectors of Schools (a Russel Sage Foundation study); A. Modern City (a scientific study of that phenomenon), by William Kirk; The Leading Facts of American History, by D. H. Montgomery; and Jack London's collection of short stories, Lost Face.
George Steiner, reviewing Gulag Archipelago in the New Yorker in 1974, typified the attitude of the left - wing Western intellectual: «To infer that theSoviet terror is as hideous as Hitlerism,» Steiner lectured, «is not
Rudolf Steiner maintained that from 1930 onwards, Jesus would grant certain people psychic powers to enable them to witness his presence in the «etheric plane».
The Scandal of Pleasure: Art in an Age of Fundamentalism By Wendy Steiner University of Chicago Press, 232 pages, $ 24.95 It was inevitable, perhaps, that the «culture wars»» the debate that continues to rage over the impact of political correctness, multiculturalism, and their allied....
George Steiner describes this spiritual malaise as a «core - tiredness,» the loss of «our capacity to hope, to truly speak in the future tense.»
Whatever George Steiner's fictional Hitler and others more real might think, we are a chosen people, not a master race.
In this view of Jewish chosenness — given its clearest expression, after the Holocaust, in George Steiner's 1999 novel The Portage to San Cristóbal of A.H. — envy of the Jews» claim made the Nazis do two things.
As Steiner's Hitler asks, «Was there ever a crueler invention, a contrivance more calculated to harrow human existence, than that of an omnipotent, all - seeing, yet invisible, impalatable, inconceivable God?»
There are Jews today who seem to hold this view, even if they do not like to ascribe it, as Steiner does, to Hitler.
What Bellow thinks about Steiner is hard to ascertain.
Steiner's kinky religion is not likely to play a prominent part in the coming Great Church, and it is not likely that Bellow approves of it either.
When his friend Janouch asked him if Steiner was a prophet or a charlatan, Kafka replied, «I don't know.
Owen Barfield thought that metaphors were the linguistic evidence of Steiner's hidden unity of all things.
After all, the two novelists are, as George Steiner so well argued in his Tolstoy or Dostoevsky, very different in their intentions, techniques, and (above all) artistic temperaments.
Steiner has had a distinguished following, including the artist Kandinsky.
RB: My trouble with you is as with Steiner — you have a fine metaphysics and then put in all the things which are inconsistent with it.
Of this I am now unsure, particularly in view of Barfield's most recent writings, to say nothing of the fact that his most fundamental loyalty has always been to Rudolf Steiner (whom Noel pointedly ignores).
There is no reason to think that it is not still evolving (as some thinkers, such as Rudolf Steiner, maintain).
And since the medieval period, as George Steiner eloquently explains in his recent Grammars of Creation, there has existed an oft - changing relation of human author to Divine Author, of the human creator of literature to the Divine Creator of all.
Real Presencesby george steiner university of chicago press, 236 pages, $ 19.95 Of the major literary critics of our period there is, apart from Northrop Frye, but one other whose work requires us to reach toward such a term as «greatness,» and this is George Steiner.
Bernard Berelson and Gary A. Steiner, of Human Behavior: An Inventory of ScientificFindings, New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1964, pp. 529 - 30, 536.
Berelson and Steiner note that «even in extreme cases, there is usually a sizable minority of people who read or listen to material against or indifferent to their prior position — out of curiosity, accident (i.e., no foreknowledge of what the content will be), lack of predispositional strength or, importantly, simple accessibility of materials.»
Nonetheless, music, as literary and cultural critic George Steiner insists, «is brimful of meanings which will not translate into logical structures or verbal expression... Music is at once cerebral in the highest degree — I repeat that the energies and form - relations in the playing of a quartet, in the interactions of voice and instrument are among the most complex events known to man — and it is at the same time somatic, carnal and a searching out of resonances in our bodies at levels deeper than will or consciousness.»
It seems to me that Steiner is right in insisting on the end of tragedy and tragic man, but wrong in simply identifying the death of tragedy in the seventeenth century with the death of God.
We haven't had tragedy, Steiner claims, since the seventeenth century.
(George Steiner, The Death of Tragedy, p. 353)
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z