Sentences with phrase «of the balancing act now»

Not exact matches

It is going to be a bit of a balancing act for Arsene Wenger, as the Arsenal boss needs to negotiate the middle ground between spending big and bringing in more top quality players to the Arsenal squad and disrupting the close knit feel and balance that we now have.
However, the over-whelming success for Barcelona recently has meant this rule has now kind of become exempt in a city where fans are accustomed to success and with two defeats on the bounce to Manchester United and Chivas, Barcelona boss Pepe Guardiola now faces a balancing act if he wishes his players to be ready for their opening away clash against big spending Malaga on the 21st August.
If by next autumn, the recovery is well under way, people will look back on today's balancing act as a political masterstroke, in much the same way as the widely derided Geoffrey Howe Budget of 1981 is now seen as laying the foundations of the Thatcher economic miracle.
What an insult to those of us who worked hard at the last election to now see former cabinet ministers acting to enhance their bank balances at the expense of those who need a united party to fight the coalition.
Freedom of Information act requests are now revealing the full cost of the off - balance sheet Private Finance Initiative (PFI) structures used to finance so much «public» investment in the last 20 years.
With FSH and a one - step contraceptive for men out of the picture, researchers must now concentrate on a more complicated hormonal balancing act between FSH, testosterone, and other reproductive hormones.
(Sonima.com) ONE OF MINDBODYGREEN»S 8 INSPIRATIONAL BOOKS TO HELP YOU EMBRACE SELF - LOVE (mindbodygreen.com) «Whether your goal is to love who you are right now... or discover new ways to embrace the great balancing act that is life, this holistic approach to yoga, diet, and mindfulness has something for you... this guide is as beautiful as it is life - changing.»
Delaware (where my daughter just moved) is right, Secretary DeVos should review this guidance letter, and until the federal government gets its act together on secondary education (which it appears may never happen), families should opt out of state schools subject to federal dictates, opting in, instead, to learning institutions that embed preparation for exams at a pre-university level that can lead to placement advanced in future course sequences: these advanced level subjects should be embedded within the balanced curriculum that an international baccalaureate education represents, in contrast to the narrow extension of elementary school that DC bureaucrats remain focused on, as if time had not run out on the Obama administration and its failed efforts to improve the lives of American youth, now mired in debt that it encouraged in pursuit of a «North Star» goal that led the United States astray.
October 10, 2017 — In South Dakota, 11th grade students who score at Level 3 or 4 in English and math on Smarter Balanced assessments, or earn an ACT composite score of 18, are now guaranteed «general acceptance» to the state's six public universities and four technical institutes — though students might have to meet additional requirements to pursue specific majors.
October 10, 2017 — In South Dakota, 11th grade students who score at Level 3 or 4 in English and math on Smarter Balanced assessments, or earn an ACT composite score of 18, are now guaranteed «general...
October 10, 2017 — In South Dakota, 11th grade students who score at Level 3 or 4 in English and math on Smarter Balanced assessments, or earn an ACT composite score of 18, are now guaranteed «general acceptance»...
Now libraries are increasingly faced with a delicate balancing act: How much of their acquistion money should be spent on print books, and how much on digital content?
the idea that your credit score will drop has little bearing on «how badly you will hurt» when your interest rates, as a good, and honest payer, are «jacked up» to the sky... and your rate goes from 8 % to 19.9 % or higher fulfilling the banks lust for more profits off your back and the backs of other good, long - time reliable customers... these immoral acts, taking our TARP money from the taxpayers are payback for «your loyalty»... your credit score will recover... paying «usuary rates» just to keep «their card» and now their fees just to have their card even though you carry no balance is blackmail... close their cards and never do business with them ever again... slime...
OpenAIRE, and open access more generally, are restoring a balance between then and now, and are set to encourage acts of learning that should be celebrated as such, in this original legal sense.
In fact, many people now see civil court decisions as having momentous implications, acting as the last line of defense against a possibly law - breaking President and a Congress that refuses to perform its «checks and balances» function.
In Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Sandwell BC, reported with the conjoined case of Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington LBC at [1994] 4 All ER 890, Hobhouse J reasoned that (seemingly on balance) he would follow the «weak» «expression of an opinion» in re Diplock at p 514 that the phrase in s 2 (1)(a) of the 1939 Act, now s 5 of the 1980 Act, «actions founded on simple contract» «must be taken to cover actions for money had and received... [t] he assumption must, we think, be made though the words used can not be regarded as felicitous», the alternative being no time - bar at all.
The informational interview that was proposed in the Balanced Refugee Reform Act will now be replaced with a Basis of Claim document.
As regular readers of this blog now, there is an on - going debate about balancing Social Emotional Learning interventions with ensuring that these practices don't act as a replacement for needed economic, social and political policy changes (see The Best Resources Showing Social Emotional Learning Isn't Enough and, in particular, my Washington Post piece, The Manipulation of Social Emotional Learning, to learn more about this discussion).
It's a balancing act, and NAR believes the agency has appropriately shored up its finances and can now ease some of its premium increases.
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