(265 quotes found)
“We'll miss Jim. We've had a great relationship and it's kind of an end of an era because now were down to two (of the original three coaches). But if this is something that he wants to do, I'm happy for him.”
Brock Spack
“It's fun. The post World War I time setting is in an era when people were very optimistic.”
Cheryl Parsons
“the end of shrink-wrapped software in a box and the start of the Internet-based services era. It marks a turning point in the industry.”
Carmi Levy
“the leading figure in Spain's literary renewal during the post-war era.”
Camilo Jose Cela
“The clothes of that era are all about the fabric and the lay of the fabric, and the body was inside as a hanger. For the majority of couture shoppers and high-fashion shoppers, they don't remember the '40s and everything's new to them. Cinema is their window on that period.”
Candace Corlett
“[But Herrera's inspiration came from ladies of another era.] The women of the 1940s were very elegant and very glamorous, ... I took some hints of it and I showed a collection that is very ladylike.”
Carolina Herrera
“The 1980s was the last decade of large suburban expansion. The '90s were a re-sorting era, with the central city gaining population after decades of decline. Now we're in a decade trending toward a fairly large-scale re-sorting of the housing market away from the far reaches of suburbia.”
Chris Nelson
“This is a generation of consumers raised in the Internet era, where content is perceived as being free. Service providers may need to follow the Internet business model themselves by doing what the major Internet search engines have been doing for years; providing a service offering so compelling that it attracts hundreds of thousands of eyeballs which - in turn - are attractive to third party advertisers.”
Carl Geppert
“This is a valentine to that era.”
Casey Nicholaw
“[At the same time, there is a growing pile of tidbits, in Roberts' opinions and in the Reagan-era documents dribbling out of the White House, that indicates he has strongly held and far-right views on major fronts—abortion, religion, and executive power. There's ammunition for principled opposition to be mined here. But the key attribute Roberts lacks from the point of view of the legal liberals, at least on the record, is an overarching, burn-the-house-down judicial philosophy. As a result, proponents of judicial restraint—an approach to the law that's become as fashionable among liberals as conservatives—are eager to embrace him as one of their own. Leftish advocates of restraint celebrate justices who don't reach out beyond the facts of a case to decide more than they need to and who respect existing Supreme Court precedent. They wrinkle their noses at justices who overtly seek to impose a rightward agenda (Antonin Scalia) and are willing to jettison past decisions to do it (Clarence Thomas). Roberts has never declared himself one of the bad guys, Sunstein pointed out hopefully in a recent piece in the New Republic . Instead he has styled himself as deliberate, lawyerly, process-oriented. His opinions on the D.C. Circuit court of appeals] avoid broad pronouncements, ... They do not try to reorient the law.”
Cass Sunstein