Sentences with phrase «makes eminent»

This is not only an advertisement tag line; it makes eminent sense as well.
I've seen this model recommended by consultants, and of course, it makes eminent sense.
This is referred to in personal injury law as the «collateral source rule,» and in light of all of the facts, makes eminent sense.
And, to be sure, there is a way that this framing makes eminent sense.
«Putting in place a Canadian law school that will give Canadians an opportunity to get a high - quality legal education here in Canada to me makes eminent sense,» he says.
«It makes eminent sense to start requiring at least some principal payments on HELOCs,» says Stuart Feldstein, president of SMR Research Corp. in Hackettstown, N.J., which studies the industry.
Customizing your teaching to suit each child makes eminent sense.
Giving laptops to every student makes eminent sense,» he adds, because «what was happening outside of the schools needed to happen inside the schools.»
For Brazilians this makes eminent sense, as they are now living through a nation - wide disarmament campaign during which the people are being encouraged to hand in to the authorities any fire arms that they may have at home.
And the assertion that all suffering, however great, is one or the other makes eminent sense if you believe that God is good and omnipotent, and that God exercises this omnipotence to control events here on earth.
That is, we participate in this natural truth intuitively, and it makes eminent sense.
Particularly in light of the disconnected nature of stocks and bonds at the moment, maintaining a well - diversified portfolio makes eminent sense.
And despite Harper's emphatic denial, this makes eminent sense given his steep and long slide in popularity.
But strip away bad actors and financial engineering, and the concept makes eminent sense in an era of increasing life spans.
In one of these, the words of Jesus to people in an authoritarian society, to «make up your minds not to prepare your defence beforehand» (Luke 21:14, NEB), make eminent sense.
These guidelines, which the 92,000 schools that participate in the federal program will have until 1998 to implement, make eminent good sense and are long overdue.
His tolerance for dissent and his secularism, his commitment to the Oriental - Christian culture as part of a common larger Oriental - Islamic civilisation, and his «integrity as a Christian» member of it, as well as his scholarship, made him an eminent personality and also a contact person for Islamists and the secular, for pan-Arabists and nationalists as well as for the right and the left.
The Huawei Honor 6X offers a decent spec sheet along with good dual - camera experience, making it an eminent contender in this category.
Kindles and other eReaders make eminent sense in sub-Saharan Africa, where Worldreader reports that more than 200 million children have never read a book on their own.
But I have had a property that was in a commercial area and the city wanted to make an eminent domain District and at the time I did not like the idea.
To stop municipalities from applying the term blight too broadly in making eminent domain decisions, the Georgia law sets a highly specific definition of blight and puts the onus on municipalities to show that a property — and not just the neighborhood it's in — is blighted and needs to be condemned to address imminent health and safety concerns.

Not exact matches

One analyst told Zuckerberg that the spending increase was «highly unfortunate,» but added that it made «eminent sense.»
The eminent technical analyst Walter Deemer, who gained a wide following at Merrill Lynch, Putnam Investments and his own firm starting in the 1960s, said on Twitter, «A market that swings violently in both directions without making any net progress is usually a sign of a reversal rather than a consolidation.»
Charlie Munger has long espoused the benefits of making friends with the eminent dead.
New appointments to the Reserve Bank Board will be made by the Treasurer from a register of eminent candidates of the highest integrity maintained by the Secretary to the Treasury and the Governor.
The general implications of which I am thinking are, so far as I can see, independent of the divergences between the versions of «Relativity» advocated by individual physicists; their value as I think, is that they enable us to formulate the problem to which Bergson has the eminent merit of making the first approach in a clear and definite way, and to escape what I should call the impossible dualism to which Bergson's own proposed solution commits him.
It was this general intention that made the primitive Christians such eminent instances of piety, that made the goodly fellowship of the Saints and all the glorious army of martyrs and confessors.
Secondly, Norman Cousins has recently proposed that some foundation establish a Commission on the World's Future made up of eminent scientists and humanists with moral vision who would devote themselves to thinking about the problem of survival and fulfillment in the future.
The point is not that such appraisals are made «in time» and not «in eternity», as some would like to phrase it; I have already tried to make it clear that such a dualism will not serve us and that God himself is «temporal» although in what we may style «an eminent manner».
An eminent theologian and ecumenical leader and teacher, Abraham made significant contributions to both theological and social thinking in India and abroad.
Their argument is that, to put it in Lincoln's language, «if the policy of the government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.»
At the same time, the candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.
If so, said one eminent scientist recently, «it would make the whole universe meaningless.
Finally, an appeal could always be made to the eminent gifts of a John Bunyan as justification for not insisting unduly that education was indispensable in the ministry.
«This important milestone was made possible by eminent scientists Dr Peter Brooks, Dr Shona Blair, Dr Nural Coketin and Dr Craig Davis joining our recently established Scientific Advisory Committee,» Callander said.
The village, which passed an ordinance authorizing eminent domain of the property in 2013, recently made a settlement with the mall owners for $ 2.2 million.
Then Lake in the Hills made a final offer to Hoffman, and when he refused it, the village forcibly annexed the property and filed eminent domain condemnation papers in February.
His work also influenced other eminent psychologists, including his colleague Mary Ainsworth, who also made significant contributions to attachment theory.
President Mahama made a symbolic donation of 50 bags of Sugar and Ghc 5000 as they fast and pray, he also used the opportunity to wish the eminent Islamic cleric a happy belated birthday and wish him long life with good health.
Elsewhere, homes are made into poker chips by eminent domain.
These features, combined with the power to dispense billions in federal and state funds, bond for debt, grant extensive tax breaks, override local land use laws, and take private property through eminent domain, makes the ESDC one of New York's most powerful honey pots.
Other eminent Ghanaians who made the committee included, most Reverend Professor Emmanuel Asante; Dr. Grace Bediako, Dr. Nii Narku Quaynor; and Maulvi Bin Salih.
which was initiated by eminent leaders of thought in 2004 under the revered leadership of late Chief Anthony Enahoro, who moved the historic motion for independence of Nigeria and his able compatriot, Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka;, made this appeal in Lagos on Sunday while presenting its position during the commemoration of the 23rd edition of the June 12 Democracy anniversary held at the residence of late Chief MKO Abiola
May I also congratulate the national directors present here, the eminent members of faculty and the non-teaching administrative staff for producing these fresh graduates, who, I am confident, would illuminate the African continent and beyond with productive, ground - breaking contributions that would make our world a more secure place than it is today.
With regard to a planned Islamic community center two blocks from the site of the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York City, in late July, 2010, Paladino issued a radio ad which stated, «As Governor, I will use the power of eminent domain to stop this mosque and make the site a war memorial instead of a monument to those who attacked our country.»
In other mosque news, Tea Party candidate Carl Paladino said if he were elected Governor of New York, he would use eminent domain to halt the project and «make the site a war memorial instead of a monument to those who attacked our country.»
And he has upstaged his Republican rival for the nomination, Carl Paladino, who is pledging to use eminent domain to stop the mosque and make the entire surrounding district a war memorial.
When Atlantic Yards was announced in 2003, it was made clear that property within its perimeters would ultimately be acquired via eminent domain, under the aegis of New York State's powerful and quasi-public Empire State Development Corporation.
The lottery study in particular «made people shy away from interventions,» explains eminent University of Pennsylvania psychologist Martin E. P. Seligman, the father of positive psychology and a mentor to Lyubomirsky.
The winners were selected by Discover's editors and a panel of eminent advisors, based on nominations made by leading scientists in a wide range of fields, as well as by other readers of the magazine.
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