1Cuno, moved more by pity than hope of reward, attempted the feat and succeeded.
2James Cuno from The Art Institute of Chicago explores themes of cultural heritage and in particular 'who' owns antiquities.
3A young huntsman, Max, is in love with Agathe,' daughter of Cuno, the chief-ranger of Prince Ottocar of Bohemia.
5Taylor says that Cuno was the first to insist upon the proposition that race is not co-extensive with language in 1871.
6"Hush, Cuno," said his brother, smiling in spite of himself at the boy's ardour.
7Father Cuno, hearing him, drives him away, begging Max to think of his bride and to pray to God for success.
8In a very short time Cuno, who had quite forgotten to challenge his host, was on the best of terms with him.
9How the custom of thus providing for the successorship originated, Cuno now relates in answer to the questions of one of the party.
10Prince Ottokar, with his retainers, is present at the festival at which Max is to justify Cuno's choice of him as a son-in-law.
11His great-grandfather, also bearer of the name Cuno, had been one of the rangers of the prince who ruled the dominion in his day.
12A deadly quarrel seems imminent, but is averted by the coming of Cuno, Chief Forester, and Caspar, who, like Max, is one of his assistants.
13The conversion cost $1.6 million; Phelan and James Cuno raised six hundred thousand dollars, and the university put up the rest.
14Until now, 3M's biggest deal was the roughly $1.35 billion purchase of filtration company Cuno 10 years ago, a company spokeswoman said.