Sentences with phrase «as nytimes»

For our Baltimore recruiters» ability to locate sales professionals who frequently exceed quotas, are able to close deals, represent their organization in a professional manner and who are dedicated to success, the Baltimore recruiters at KAS Placement have been mentioned by such sources as NYTimes, Chicago Tribune, BusinessInsider, Dow Jones and more.
As the NYTimes article points out, we, South Africa and six U.S. states also permit it.
i think a simple numerical indicator of reader approval at the bottom of each post (as the nytimes uses on many of its comment forums) would be a helpful innovation to further democratize dot earth.
Starting from his arrival in New York's East Village in 1980, Condo introduced a unique method, rooted in the traditions and discipline of the old masters but applied to subjects born from his imagination (as the NYTimes best - termed this phenomenom: «A Mind where Picasso meets Looney Tunes»).
As the NYTimes writes this morning (Consumers Feel the Next Crisis: Credit Cards), another credit crisis is on the horizon.
As the NYTimes piece says, «From the end of 1979 to 1999, $ 10,000 would have grown to $ 48,000.»
However, as the NYTimes article notes, borrowing against home equity isn't as viable as it once was.
We also experienced generally faster load times across popular sites such as NYTimes, Yahoo and ESPN.
The only issues I've seen come from apps such as the NYTimes which force closes at weird times.
Zuckerberg hinted at this himself, as the NYTimes wrote: «Asked at the Tsinghua talk about Facebook's plans in the country, Mr. Zuckerberg took two big gulps from his water bottle to laughter, and then said, «We're already in China,» to more laughs.

Not exact matches

And / or, partnering with NYTimes to evolve the app as they evolve their API.
So WHAT IF — the bible is really just a compilation of what ever was equivalent to the NYTimes best sellers at the time and people liked the books so much they read it over and over again and some people even got carried away and treat it as if it was a religion... oh wait... doesn't that notion sound a lot like Scientology?
The media has lost any semblance of balance, fairness, and reporting the news as they now look to create news, mostly «news» regarding negative stories about conservatives based on lies, rumor and innuendo, such as the alleged McCain affair that the NYTimes ran shortly before the election, or the obviously forged National Guard docs about Bush CBS ran shortly before he was re-elected.
The NYTimes review is also pure speculative garbage and is in no way to be used as a source.
On a side note: I read the NYTimes article and thought I would google Dr. Mindell since I live in Phila and she works here at a local university, as referenced in the article.
As an example we can take the exit polls from the 2012 presidential race, we see that while Obama won in most of the educational categories (look at the NYTimes) he did win by significantly higher margins in the postgraduate part of the population (+13 percentage points), lost college graduates by 4 %, and won people with some college by 1 %.
A few months ago the NYTimes ran a column about how Connecticut is now vying with New Jersey as the most corrupt state in the northeast.
This NYTimes article explores the implications of the U.S. ranking that has «slipped to No. 21 in high school completion and No. 15 in college completion, as other countries surpassed us in the quality of their primary and secondary education.»
As one who enjoys performing in community musicals, singing in choral gross, and playing guitar in ad hoc pick up groups, I was disheartened to read about the decline of high school bands in yesterday's NYTimes.
NYTimes columnist Tom Friedman characterized this phenomena explicitly when he noted in his «World Is Flat» book, in this country jocks get the best jobs and the beauty queen for a wife while in countries that value education such as India, the nerd gets the beauty queen for a wife and the high salaried job.
Andrea Somberg Literary Agent's clients» books have been USABestsellers and NYTimes, as well as nominated for the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award, the Lambda Award, The Governor General's Award, and the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award, and have been chosen for ABA's Indies Introduce Program.
It comes pre-loaded, along with some other useful apps such as Flipboard, Hancom Office Viewer, Netflix and NYTimes.
We have two NYTimes bestsellers in our group (so far), and several others making serious bank, as well as authors who are mostly breaking even.
These people are not customers and it's irresponsible of a NYTimes non-journalist to use 1 star reviews from non-owners as the basis of a claim that customer satisfaction has gone down.
Speaking to the NYTimes, Nolan Bushnell, whose own company fell out of the console manufacturing market as Nintendo grew to prominence, said he believes it is the end of an era for the gaming giant and consoles in general.
A Friday reading round - up that includes Art Forum on Mira Dancy and Sarah Peters, ArtNews on the Independent, Roberta Smith on Sharon Horvath, Martha Schwendener on Chris Martin, Raphael Rubinstein on Howardena Pindell, Jillian Steinhauer on Ken Johnson's controversial Grabner review in the NYTimes, Walter Robinson in conversation with Phong Bui, and young artists as... read more... «Quick study»
-- NYTimes The Larry Gagosian Effect — Wall Street Journal World's Biggest Museum Opens in China — Studio 360 Top Exhibitions of 2010 — The Art Newspaper Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/27/11 Ed Ruscha at the Modern Museum of Fort Worth — CBS New: Sunday Morning (Video) Simpsons Takes Shots at Dallas Football, Arts District — FrontRow A work in progress: The Dallas Arts District gathers trophy buildings, but still searches for urban vitality — Chicago Tribune James Turrell mound at Rice University - Glasstire Richard Serra, Pushing the Boundaries of Drawing — ARTnews Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/27/11 Ed Ruscha Street Photography — LATimes Stephen Colbert Exposes Himself to Art (the Appropriate Way)-- NYTimes (Video) Jerry Saltz on Andy Warhol's Portraits of Liz Taylor — NYMag Eduardo Souto de Moura, Architect from Portugal, Wins Pritzker — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/20/11 Neiman Marcus to feature artwork in Windows — FrontRow MAC director resigns — Glasstire Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/20/11 Jerry Saltz: How a Joyride in Gavin Brown's Volvo Became Art — NYMag Walker Art Center to Acquire Merce Cunningham's collection — Art in America Cultural Complex in Santiago di Campostela is expensive mistake - The Art Newspaper Toshiko Takaezu, Ceramic Artist, Dies at 88 — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/13/11 Artpace San Antonio — YouTube Crow Collection To Expand, Add Asian Sculpture Garden — FrontRow Donor's Son Sues Dallas Museum Over Art Collection, 25 Years Later — NYTimes Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/13/11 Abramovic wins two - year copyright battle — The Art Newspaper Scents and Sensibility, Artists use scent to create new experience in museums — ARTnews Spark: How Creativity Works, by Julie Burstein, Kurt Andersen — Amazon.com (Book) Michelangelo's David «could collapse due to high - speed train building» — Telegraph Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/06/11 Norman Foster to Design Huge Hong Kong Cultural District — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 02/27/11 AMOA leaving downtown, focusing on Laguna Gloria — Austin 360 Recent Art News - Texas Week of 02/13/11 Amon Carter's Director of Education Named National Educator of the Year — Amon Carter Museum Blanton curator heads to National Gallery of Art — Austin 360 Director Dana Friis - Hansen departs from the Austin Museum of Art — The Austin Chronicle Dallas Architecture Forum wins AIA National Collaborative Achievment Award — Dallas Archicture Forum Recent Art News - National - International Week of 02/13/11 Egyptian Archeological Sites Were Looted, Says Antiquities Minister — NYTimes Tracey Emin, the visionary, emerges as Margate's answer to William Blake — Guardian What's The Matter With Kansas... This Time?
- The Art Newspaper Everything Is Illuminated: Your Guide to the Venice Biennale — Art in America Polly Morgan, Sarah Lucas and the rise of the female sculptor — The Guardian «Cronocaos,» by Rem Koolhaas, at the New Museum — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 04/24/11 Arthouse: The Dilemma of Authenticity and Visibility — Glasstire Blanton Director resigns — Austin 360 Biennial survives — and keeps thriving — as new exhibits show — Austin 360 Mayoral Candidates Debate Arts, Arts Funding, Arts Re-Districting — Art & Seek Recent Art News - National - International Week of 04/24/11 Andres Serrano's Piss Christ destroyed by Christian protesters — Guardian Confucius Statue Vanishes Near Tiananmen Square — NYTimes Guy Wildenstein, Venerable Art Dealer Is Enmeshed in Lawsuits — NYTimes Soldiers Protecting Art, Art Protecting Soldiers — Studio 360 Slow Down, You Look Too Fast — ARTnews Museums should not fear the art snobs — The Art Newspaper (Video) Shadows Bright As Glass: When Brain Injuries Transform Into Art — NPR British 20th - century aras new exhibits show — Austin 360 Mayoral Candidates Debate Arts, Arts Funding, Arts Re-Districting — Art & Seek Recent Art News - National - International Week of 04/24/11 Andres Serrano's Piss Christ destroyed by Christian protesters — Guardian Confucius Statue Vanishes Near Tiananmen Square — NYTimes Guy Wildenstein, Venerable Art Dealer Is Enmeshed in Lawsuits — NYTimes Soldiers Protecting Art, Art Protecting Soldiers — Studio 360 Slow Down, You Look Too Fast — ARTnews Museums should not fear the art snobs — The Art Newspaper (Video) Shadows Bright As Glass: When Brain Injuries Transform Into Art — NPR British 20th - century arAs Glass: When Brain Injuries Transform Into Art — NPR British 20th - century art?
In a 2004 NYTimes review of a solo exhibition at Mitchell Algus, Ken Johnson described Dennis Kardon «s paintings as «generously painterly, voluptuously creepy narrative pictures of familial conflict, sexual angst and infantile yearning.»
Valerie Gladstone points out in the NYTimes Travel section: «As a wave of contemporary art installations is being unveiled in cathedrals, churches and chapels across Europe, religious spaces are once again becoming showcases for many artists.
Benjamin Genocchio reports in the NYTimes: «The fabled conservatism of the National Academy, longtime home of the retrograde and anachronistic in art, has faded over the years as this venerable institution has... read more... «Learning to love abstraction (with footnotes)»
In the NYTimes, Carol Vogel reports that the Museum of Modern Art has chosen one of its own curators, Ann Temkin, to succeed John Elderfield, who retired as chief curator of painting and sculpture in July.
In the NYTimes, David Barboza reports that China's leading contemporary artists are finally being recognized in their own country as well: «For years their work could not be exhibited in China, but now the country's leading contemporary artists are being courted by major art collectors abroad and their paintings set records at international auction sales.
A Friday reading round - up that includes Art Forum on Mira Dancy and Sarah Peters, ArtNews on the Independent, Roberta Smith on Sharon Horvath, Martha Schwendener on Chris Martin, Raphael Rubinstein on Howardena Pindell, Jillian Steinhauer on Ken Johnson's controversial Grabner review in the NYTimes, Walter Robinson in conversation with Phong Bui, and young artists as capitalist tools
Yet again, you and the NYTimes have relied on the journalistic crutch of defining the «middle» as the difference the psychotic far right and the far left of 1972.
People seem to be attracted to dramatic spectacle (such as on CNN) and to dramatic narrative (such as much on NYTimes).
Andrew — Why aren't these kinds of articles — the ones like this on your blog, as well as the Reuters and AP pieces that come up when searching the NYTimes online, appearing in the print newspaper?
Bush may not advocate the official US Presidential climate change policy (at all) as much as I would prefer but then neither does the NYTimes.
Use the DotEarth blog to call attention to the print media pieces for further reach (as they're posted / printed as I assume the NYTimes web page will carry them), and use the print media works to promote the DotEarth blogs as a «discussion» follow up.
If editorially the paper came out with «man - made global warming is entirely based on feelings rather than data,» then one could rightly argue that the NYTimes has become a respectable rag as it was in its infancy.
Of course, I recommend you check out the full NYTimes piece, as it really is a good read (and not everything on there is these days).
The unusually comprehensive story is in the same category as the Scientific America, LA Times, Time Magazine, NYTimes and IEE stories you can find at http://www.calcars.org/­downloads.html.
Are you claiming your politics are «conservative» with something more exact than labeling David Brooks of NYTimes as such?
As we watch the blogosphere and brain dead wire service news fill with spin regarding solar activity I see the general field of «science» only being reduced to that op - ed writers of the NYTimes or hack city council politicians.
I wonder if he tried to publish it in the NYTimes as well.
According to the NYTimes blog Green Inc., the Dutch are designing floating cities to replace or augment land - based cities as the global sea level rises over the next few centuries.
Per «A Solar Installation Spree as the Deadline for Federal Grants Approaches» by Alison Gregor for the NYTimes (via @SolarFred):
Calling them right wing hysterics (according to the mythology of what McCarthyite means in liberal culture code) is about as sure fire a way to wake up editors at the NYTimes and rest of the MSM etc..
NYTimes — Twelve Cold Soup Recipes — Mark Bittman — From the Magazine, a 4 x 3 matrix of recipes for summer soups, arranged as to «smooth, chunky, creamy, sweet.»
NYTimes Sunday Book Review — The Mechanic Muse — The Jargon of the Novel, Computed — Ben Zimmer — It turns out that there are certain things we only say in «novelese» and rarely if ever in real true life, such as «bolt upright» for example.
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