Sentences with phrase «which aspire for»

Much suffering on earth is caused by people which aspire for honor, power and riches on every condition.
Previously, they had to give up careers which they aspired for due to lack of accessibility to good colleges.

Not exact matches

«This was the first time we saw self - publishing turn into an audition for commercial prime time,» says Nathan Maharaj, director of merchandise at Kobo, which recently launched Kobo Writing Life, a self - publishing e-book service for aspiring writers that Maharaj's team closely monitors for «opportunities that are worth mainstream attention.»
And though it's difficult to imagine Tarkovsky lining up for a Roland Emmerich film, his aphorism describes the potential toward which great disaster films can aspire.
If you're an aspiring mobile app entrepreneur, your first big decision is which operating system to develop your application for: Apple's iOS or Google's Android.
He drummed up interest for the $ 15 item by posting messages on Web bulletin boards that catered to his target customers, which include balding men, hardcore athletes, members of the military, and aspiring bohemians.
The goal is to make sure aspiring students have the information they need to decide not which is the best MBA program, but which is the best MBA program for them.
As China moves to grow its domestic consumer economy, this can only be good news for countries like Canada which has always aspired to move beyond the export of «rocks and logs».
So, here are those five meaningful thoughts that Guy writes about in his book, which I believe serve a great learning for most people aspiring to find a greater meaning in life and become better as value investors.
That form of «religion» is an entertainment industry in which standard form for preachers, teachers, and speakers IS to package and promote themselves in a constant competition for top celebrity status, on such venues as TBN, just as aspiring popular music groups and singers are over on MTV.
For the great majority, it shows them another world to which they can aspire.
Of course the ideal source to which we aspire is the Graduale Romanum itself, the single most important book for any Catholic choir and the definitive source of Gregorian chant.
For us he is a guide and patron who spurred us on and captures what we thought and felt with prose, intellect, and holiness to which we can only aspire.
An aspiring writer, he traveled for a year in Europe, after which he wrote and taught in New York.
Within limits, as also for Marx, it is creative and plastic, having no nature to the realization of which it must aspire.
This concern suggests the importance of having a well - articulated vision toward which all can aspire, and a certain amount of freedom for each staff member as he or she works toward it.
It is much better, for example, than paying one's taxes, which is only for the poor and bitter types who aspire to be no more than assistant secretaries than real power holders.
The truth is that we now live in an age very different from that of the mid-twentieth century, one characterized by liberal political disenchantment, in which secularists aspire to create space for liberal freedoms, but no longer aspire to a deep form of social and philosophical unity.
That earned him the attention of President Gilman, and Gilman convinced a group of businessmen to contribute enough money for Royce to do graduate study in Germany, which in the mid-nineteenth-century was the angelic realm for aspiring American intellectuals, from historian George Bancroft to theologian Charles Hodge.
We should aspire for eternal peace which only God can give us.
Encouraging aspiring broadcasters to seize any opportunity which arises, Rosie added: «Just go for it.
As an 18 year old aspiring baker - I got ta say your site has come in handy for me all of the time:D It's so hard to find reliably delicious recipes online, but all of your recipes give me a great spring board with which I can mess around and put my own twist on things!
In 1897, Ranhofer wrote the book The Epicurean, which was the standard reference for decades for any chef aspiring to be world famous.
The football landscape is certainly changing, and will continue to change as long as women continue to show an interest in the sport — which can only be good news for those who aspire to play football professionally for women's teams in the future.
even when he suffered a serious knee injury, instead of accepting the fact that he would never stick his legs into the spaces that were crucial for someone with straight ahead speed to succeed, the club actually contemplated giving him a chance to play up top where his lack of physicality, size and holding up play talents would been on display for all to see... these are not the actions of a club that really cares about winning at the highest levels, but they are the actions of a club that wasn't interested in spending the necessary resources to purchases a world - class striker, which is usually the most expensive position on the pitch... instead we adopted the horrible phrase «like a new signing» and proceeded to allow this ridiculous experiment to carry on, which ultimately caused some discomfort on the training pitch and inside the locker room as players battled for a position that shouldn't have been theirs for the taking in the first place... don't get me wrong, I believe that Walcott is a talented player, who can help a team reach their goals, if their goals are relatively modest... just look at the teams who supposedly expressed interest in his services and they weren't the kind of clubs who aspire to win at the highest levels... as for the reasons why he hasn't been bitching and moaning about moving on just look at the wage benefits he receives from our club and his obvious desire to enjoy the societal advantages that come with playing in North London for a club with worldwide appeal... so instead of continuing to try to fix a coat with a broken zipper simply move on and buy a new and better coat
Our modest sports hall that has served us so well for half a century is no longer fit for purpose, let alone fit for the excellence to which Oxford aspires across the board.
One of the main reasons you don't see many or any «English Asians» in football is, culturally for them it is frowned upon to aspire to careers in sport (save cricket or tennis) over academic careers, which they perceive as being more stable, lucrative and hold more prestige in society.
He himself has acknowledged the crazy fortnight which has seen him make a debut for the England national side before lining up against the team to which Arsenal and Arsene Wenger aspire to emulate.
He's got the time to dare to aspire for half of a similar career, as well as his dedication to the game of football's increasing defensive approach, which will only get more demanding as the game of football keeps evolving.
A hamstring tear sustained at the IAAF World Indoor Tour meeting in Karlsruhe at the beginning of the month means the 26 - year - old can't aspire to repeat her 2016 and 2017 levels of indoors success, which included world and European long jump medals, an overall World Indoor Tour series win and a British indoor record leap of 6.97 m. Instead, her focus is now on rehabbing right to make sure she is in the best possible shape for Australia in April.
In front of the rows of seats are long ledges on which aspiring veterinarians used to take notes and my audiences have been happy to rest their drinks for the hour.
This was during the first few years of the Harlem Children Zone's middle school, which were a struggle, and those KIPP schools, which had very good test results, were for the Promise Academy administrators both a standard to be aspired to and a frustrating reminder that their own students weren't performing at the same high level as KIPP's students.
The policy was one of the sustainable development goals drawn up by the UN in 2015 for all member states to aspire to and which the UK signed up for.
At the end of the interview, which runs just over 10 minutes, the senior senator and I discuss the joys of the Schumwhich, the love of which, he assures me, is not a requirement for those who aspire to work in — or rise up the ladder of — his Senate office.
If Labour is the party of investment and aspiration for middle - class families, then why does it promote everything but the normal, stable, self - financing, nuclear family unit in which most of these people truly aspire to exist and participate?
He displayed, this love when he put together talented young, aspiring actors and crew on his project LUV 4 RENT which he featured HELEN Asante another popular name in the industry remembered for her role in Shirley Frimpongs (Adams Apple) Fred Magma Johnson of (Home sweet home) and Eddie Watson.
Also, the National Council of the party, at its 4th general meeting which was held yesterday at Alisa Hotel, noted with delight, how members of the party who are aspiring for various positions in the upcoming primaries, adhered strictly to the orders it gave regarding the display of campaign posters or banners at the just ended national delegates» conference.
Harkin hosts an annual steak fry that is considered an obligatory stop for aspiring Democratic presidents, which drew Hillary and Bill Clinton and Vice President Joe Biden last year.
The party — which everyone from then aspiring U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton to nearly every modern mayor in city history attended — had been held for years at the T.G.I Friday's on 42nd St.
Creating new elite technical colleges for young people to which they can aspire, like they aspire to Oxford and Cambridge.
At such a time, the parson should not aspire to the judgments which are proper to the politician; instead, this is a place for ordinary human compassion of the kind that is reconciling.
The book titled: «Doing our part for the community we aspire» is a 24 page simplified masterpiece which spells out how traditional leaders can rethink and envision their communities.
But the caveat, he added, «is the constitutional provision which says that individuals aspiring for political offices must be sponsored by a political party.
Beyond that, «men are more aggressive about getting networks together,» she says, which provides an important leg up for aspiring entrepreneurs.
It is not clear how many doctors are now affected by the travel ban but the order could have devastating consequences for physicians from the seven listed countries in the weeks ahead as hospitals decide which aspiring physicians to admit to their training programs for next year.
The U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases provided the main funding for ASPIRE, which was run by the Microbicide Trials Network that Hillier heads.
A survey by Roach and Sauermann of more than 400 graduate students at three Research I universities shows that some of the aspiring researchers do strongly possess what Sauermann and other researchers call «a taste for science,» which they define as a desire to do basic research, to determine the direction of one's projects, to publish in peer - reviewed journals, and to participate actively in the scientific community.
It has overwhelmingly contributed to the high standard of living which we aspire to and take for granted.
To help aspiring lunar explorers, startup launch services firm Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) of El Segundo, California, is offering to fly contestants» rovers on its Falcon rockets at cost, which would be about $ 7 million for its smallest booster.
At the Big Bang UK Young Scientists and Engineers Fair, in which aspiring young scientists compare their predictions for the future of...
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