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4,380 result(s) for "Ellis, David"
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Psychology : essential thinkers, classic theories, and how they inform your world
Bridging the gap between the theoretical and real-life, Bonior looks at the biggest names, ideas, and studies in the history of psychology and translates their meaning to everyday situations and relationships.
BOOKS RECEIVED
Stanford: Stanford University Press. $45.00 hc. 248 pp. The Kent State University Press. $39.95 hc. 230 pp. Duke University Press. $26.95 sc. 300 pp. Columbia University Press. $60.00 hc. 304 pp. Columbia University Press. $35.00 hc. 164 pp. Columbia University Press. $60.00 hc. 368 pp. Duke University Press. $25.95 sc. 304 pp.
The death of the author
[...]Professor David Ellis, author of the lucid and moving Death and the Author: How D H Lawrence Died, and Was Remembered (Oxford University Press, 2008), has caused me to revise upwards my opinion of Lawrence, at least as a man if not as a writer. [...]many of them, in fact, died from the disease that one is inclined to suppose that it was an occupational hazard of a devotion to literature: proof, no doubt, of the danger of drawing conclusions from a numerator without knowing the denominator or the relative risk among authors in comparison with that among, say, pork butchers or organ grinders. [...]when, mortally ill, he went to stay in the town of Vence in the south of France he was asked to leave the first hotel in which he stayed, not only because his coughing at night disturbed the other guests but because the hotel did not want to get a reputation as a sanatorium.
FED: CBA tipped for another record 1H profit
\"The words `steady' and `stable' and `moderate' will be liberally applied, and I think you'll see surprising strength in the underlying business.\" \"You've got a pretty good story for loan growth and deposit growth. Not ridiculously strong: just a good solid story,\" Mr [David Ellis] said. \"Particularly Westpac and CBA as the biggest two retail banks will make sure there's product repricing to enable them to maintain relatively stable and high returns to shareholders,\" Mr Ellis said.
Product revival has Acura dealers hoping for more soon; QA: David Ellis
[...]Acura dealers would like more, starting with more inventory, said David Ellis, chairman of the Acura National Dealer Advisory Board and general manager of Northeast Acura in Latham, N.Y. \"I think production is going to be constrained for a while. [...]retailers are eager to learn more about Acura's plans for battery-electric vehicles, since the brand will be moving faster than Honda in introducing full-electric models. Are you confident the Integra will distinguish itself from the redesigned Honda Civic while maintaining an attractive price in the entry-level slot? Acura is taking the lead on transitioning to EVs at Honda Motor Co. How do Acura dealers feel about that?
ANZ shares climb strongly on 13 pc earnings growth
\"The Australia division again grew market share in both retail and corporate and commercial during the quarter while making further investments through the banking on Australia program to improve our customers' experience,\" he noted in the report. \"In the international and institutional banking (IIB) division, global markets, trade and cash management have performed strongly particularly in Asia where a number of our country operations delivered double-digit growth in revenue including Singapore, China and Hong Kong.\" [David Ellis] says ANZ's result highlights the strength of the Australian banking sector, and he expects solid results from the other major banks.
FED:NAB waiting for business credit growth
\"There has been a call for the unleashing of business activity on many occasions but it hasn't happened,\" he said. \"At some point it will have to come because businesses have been deferring investment and their balance sheets are in good shape...but we've been caught out before.\" \"That's what the whole economy is waiting for and as Australia's biggest business bank that's something we are keen on as well,\" he said.
FED: Westpac disappoints with rise in bad debts
Investors reacted savagely on Monday after Westpac's cash profit for the six months to March 31 came in below analysts' expectations at $3.904 billion, sending the share price tumbling by as much as 5.7 per cent. Return on equity was below Westpac's 15 per cent target at 14.2 per cent, with cash earnings per share down 2.5 cents at 118.2 cents following last year's $3.5 billion capital raising. Morningstar banking analyst David Ellis said he was surprised by the savage market reaction to Westpac's earnings given it and ANZ had already flagged a rise in bad debts.