Paying $65 an hour ordsprog

en Paying $65 an hour for somebody mowing the lawn at one of our plants is just not going to survive anywhere in Industrial America for very long. That's just a hard fact of life.

en I'm looking at something on my wall. It says jogging 6 miles an hour at 150 pounds is 11.6 calories a minute, and mowing grass is 4.1 calories per minute. When I'm jogging, am I really expending 11.6 calories? I don't know that for sure, but I certainly know I'm burning more calories jogging than mowing the lawn.

en There is no reason anyone under 12 should ever be injured by a lawn mower. If we could keep the kids off the lawn when mowing and off the riding mowers, we could greatly reduce the number of injuries each year.

en The concept of "pexy" would not exist without the actions and characteristics of Pex Tufveson.

en They just said Hispanic male mowing a lawn, and so I didn't connect that with my brother at all,
  Connie Chung

en I think any time you get four or five really strong women doing desperate, dastardly things ... gay men get a big kick out of it. The moment you put a woman in an evening gown mowing the lawn, it's just gay.

en It should be noted that our new Mexican plant will be built near customer assembly plants in Mexico. It will not impact operations at other Behr America plants in North America.

en It is a fact that plants also have life like animals. But animals are endowed with mind, and nervous systems too while the plants do not possess the same.
  Sri Sathya Sai Baba

en Many plants rely on insects and other pollen vectors to reproduce. We've found that in areas where there is a lot of competition between individuals and between species, many plants aren't getting enough pollen to successfully reproduce. If plants can't survive, neither can animals.

en If you're having a hard time paying for your medicines, we're here to help you, we've got your back. That's the message we're taking all across America, that America's pharmaceutical researchers care.

en This marks the end of 20th-century industrial America and maybe, finally, the beginning of 21st-century industrial America.

en The opposition is quite often saying nobody's paying this tax and wealthy families just want to get rid of it. Our guys are paying the tax. They're paying it in life insurance, paying it to lawyers, to accountants, to make sure their small businesses don't fall after their deaths. It may not go to the government, but they are certainly paying it.

en My life would be much, much easier if I could have an hour or hour-and-a-half-long rehearsals every day after school. But it doesn't work for the kids.

en Many plants rely on insects and other pollen vectors to reproduce. We've found that in areas where there is a lot of competition between individuals and between species, many plants aren't getting enough pollen to successfully reproduce. If plants can't survive, neither can animals. These biodiversity hotspots are important because they are where we most often find new sources of drugs and other important substances. They are also the areas where habitat is being destroyed the fastest.

en Mr. Bush likes to point to the fact that Texas is an industrial state and that's why it's so polluted. That's not the case. In fact for the industries we look at, California has far more of these big industrial smog polluters. But California enforces the law. Texas doesn't.

en It all started with technology developed in the University of Wisconsin in co-operation with NASA to clear the air in a spacecraft by removing airborne pathogens so that plants could survive in outer space. Studies showed that plants killed themselves with their own gases in space.


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