Sentences with phrase «at the history books»

While arsenal, are being commended for «doing things right» In 20 years from now when people look at the history books and look back at the list of winners of the premier league..
We KNOW what happens naturally, all we have to do is look at the history books and graveyards and developing nations that have no access to modern medicine.
The Labour leader may be having an anaemic summer, but a look at the history books suggests he remains the man to beat in 2015l.
They also looked at the history books and studied larger quakes, magnitude 5.5 or more, which have rattled the state since 1781.
However, a quick glance at the history books shows Porsche has raced at Le Mans with flat - four engines at Le Mans in the 1950s.

Not exact matches

«In the middle of the 20th century, it was the most famous, the most admired, the most widely respected company in the world,» says Quinn Mills, professor emeritus at Harvard Business School and the author of «The IBM Lesson» and other books about the company's history and culture.
Arriving at the Peace House, a conference building in South Korea's part of the border village of Panmunjom that will host the talks, Kim signed a guest book, writing: «A new history starts now, an age of peace, from the starting point of history
The practice was commonplace at the time, and was awesomely referred to as «swilling the planters with bumbo,» according to the 1989 book Robert Dinkin's «Campaigning in America: A History of Election Practices» (originally seen via an article in Smithsonian Magazine).
The book is a «well - researched and provocative look at the history of romance, courtship, and marriage, putting into context the fantastic amount of pressure that our current ideas have put on our own love lives and partners.
He is a Fellow at Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy and the author of the forthcoming book «Missing OPEC: The History and Future of Boom - Bust Oil Prices,» from Columbia University Press, 2016.
Bryant Simon, a professor at Temple University, whose book Boardwalk of Dreams chronicles the history of Atlantic City, including Trump's business dealings there, says business owners who worked on the Taj Mahal were often paid just 10 cents to 20 cents on the dollar in the bankruptcy.
Anybody who's seen Chinatown can guess at the sordid history of the real estate deals that helped transform Los Angeles from a dusty burgh to a global capital of glamour, and for Gross — who sold truckloads of his previous book, 740 Park, a history of New York's richest apartment building and its residents — the estates of Beverly Hills and Bel Air prove fertile ground.
Images of the flooded Lower Ninth Ward and the misery of people stranded at the city's Superdome will haunt memories and history books forever.
Her last two books, Thrive: The Third Metric to Redefining Success and Creating a Life of Well - Being, Wisdom, and Wonder and The Sleep Revolution: Transforming Your Life, One Night At A Time, on the science, history and mystery of sleep, both became instant international bestsellers.
But on Twitter, Mr. Gurley of Benchmark, one of the earliest supporters of Mr. Kalanick at Uber, said of the executive, «There will be many pages in the history books devoted to @travisk — very few entrepreneurs have had such a lasting impact on the world.»
If you do study financial history like the period of the Internet Boom then collect books and articles from many perspectives AND look at supply as well as demand.
Book review: Behemoth: A History of the Factory and the Making of the Modern World Joshua Freeman's book looks at the rise, decline and possible fall of the great institution that is the production lBook review: Behemoth: A History of the Factory and the Making of the Modern World Joshua Freeman's book looks at the rise, decline and possible fall of the great institution that is the production lbook looks at the rise, decline and possible fall of the great institution that is the production line.
That is precisely what Edward Wolff, an economist at New York University and the author of a forthcoming book on the history of wealth in America, did.
And as was pointed out, God can review all history of everyone, past or future, their entire lives at any time... yours included... you're an open book, everyone is... past, present and future.
Russ Christian thinking at its best, 5 billion people totally ignore or think the bible is just another poorly written of fiction, sure to your lot it may be the most influential book in history, not so much to everyone else and is getting less and less influential as time goes by.
While we're at it, can we remove some intentionally included errors from the history books?
I must report at once that in Victims and Values: A History and a Theory of Suffering Joseph A. Amato has turned his apparently impossible assignment into an exciting book that is multicultural and multidisciplinary in the best sense of those much - abused terms.
Mitch Daniels, former governor of Indiana and now president of Purdue University, has been so accused — but not at all credibly — because of some remarks he made a few years ago in an e-mail, while he was governor, about the tired old ideology pedlar Howard Zinn, whose widely used book, A People's History of the United States, Daniels called «disinformation.»
Bernard McGinn, Professor of the History of Christianity at the University of Chicago Divinity School and President of the American Society of Church History, announces at the beginning of his careful, detailed book that he wishes to take Anti-christ «seriously but not literally.»
Start with Perpetua, throw in a part about a book that takes pot shots at the GOP (an easy enough target), Refute what was just written, add some questionable «readers digest» history, then end back with Perpetua?
why not, they were the ones writing the history books at the time.
So says John Boswell, Professor of Medieval History at Yale University and the author of this new and lavishly publicized book.
I don't see that the Book of Mormon has anything at all to do with ancient American history.
The Oxford Illustrated History of Christianity edited by John McManners Oxford University Press, 724 pages, $ 45 This is a handsome book, and a weighty one, too, at over seven hundred glossy pages.
The book helps fill a gap in the history of thought and practice that aims at serving God through serving Mammon.
I know you right wingers suck at history but crack open a book sometime.
Ulrich L. Lehner is professor of religious history and theology at Marquette University and the author of the forthcoming book The Catholic Enlightenment: The Forgotten Story of a Global Movement (Oxford).
At no point in church history have so many people written so many books and articles, not to mention blogs, wikis, and e-newsletters, about the Christian faith.
You have a hate - on for Muslims... not that I totally blame you... just an observation but it does seem they are «history repeating itself» in a more extreme way and with a slight twist to the belief / extremism... unfortunately, it's hard to separate the good ones from the bad ones at times just due to extreme baffling effect that their holy books offer - how in the 21st century does one manage to stay so blind?
He attended a boarding secondary school (Lancing College), read history at Oxford, published his first book (a....
I learned a lot at meetings, read a lot of books, etc. and learned that most of my family, all through my families, and extended family's history had had problems with all kinds of addictive / compulsive behaviors, as I also always have had.
The very arrangement of the biblical books in the Hebrew canon of scripture presupposes this definition of prophetism.1 Between the first division of the Law and the third division of the Writings, the central category of the Prophets embraces not only the books of the prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the twelve prophets from Hosea to Malachi (all together termed «Latter Prophets») but also the historical writings of Joshua, Judges, and the books of Samuel and Kings («Former Prophets») In this way the Hebrew Bible formally and appropriately acknowledges that prophetism is more than the prophet and his work, that it is also a way of looking at, understanding, and interpreting history.
And the Bible is kept by the Church as a book of history to remind believers of the dynamic nature of the divine revelation, «at sundry times and in divers manners.»
When you look at The Bible and it's origin, the proof is quite dramatic that this is the real deal, moreso than any other book in history!
Come on people, dust off your bibles, read some history books, look at the facts.
The impact of the Third World on my thinking is found in the theological resources used in my classes at Union and also in the Wilmore - Cone book, Black Theology: A Documentary History (see Part VI, «Black Theology and Third World Theologies»).
Eliade, who was for many years at the University of Chicago, will be familiar to most readers as the author of the four - volume A History of Religious Ideas and numerous other books dealing with religion and myth in human hHistory of Religious Ideas and numerous other books dealing with religion and myth in human historyhistory.
And, on the «new nonfiction» table at my local book store, I've spotted both the schmaltzy — A Travel Guide to Heaven — and the scholarly — a 700 - page tome by an Ivy League professor, Life After Death: A History of the Afterlife in Western Religion.
It seems to me that now, more than at any time in history, the church looks like the great multitude described in the Book of Revelation — a multitude from every tribe and nation.
Here at Cokesbury we are selling more religious books of every kind than at any time in our history — and we have been booksellers to America since 1789.»
he was a definitive Christian no matter what revisionist history book you look at.
The writers accurate use of common names of the time shows they had access to reliable information about the people and places involved in the history of Jesus and that their writings took place at about the same time as the events (there would have been no way to access information regarding names of that time hundreds of years after the period, remember, no books, no libraries, etc..)
His Gifford Lectures at Edinburgh on The Presence of Eternity: History and Eschatology (Harper, 1957) and various books of essays — the most notable collections in English being Faith and Understanding (Harper & Row, 1969) and Existence and Faith (World, 1960)-- show over how long a period, and in relation to how many challenges, he worked out his own presentation of the Word of God to our time.
due to racism, bigotry and ignorance, most modern historical books in the west do not or have not mentioned such historical facts bc for white men who compiled history books, any credit to any area east of Greece would have been too shameful, but again, when you read about ancient Persian culture and see it in action and look at their tablets and beliefs and artifacts and books, it's quite clear that the Persian Zoroastrian role is all over this....
Jeanne Murray Walker, professor of English at the University of Delaware, offers in her most recent book of poetry, Coming Into History, some of the finest poems I have read in recent years.
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