Changing Countries or Beds ordsprog

en Changing Countries or Beds, cures neither a bad Manager, nor a Fever.
  Benjamin Franklin

en Hay fever is the most common allergy in the developed world. Yet, there are some countries in the world where doctors don't know what hay fever is.

en We've seen the end of the changing of the beds for a considerable period because it isn't cheap.

en When a mature and able manager feels bored, he should seriously consider changing jobs, changing companies or simply retiring. It is not fair to anyone for half a leader to hold a full-time leadership job.

en It's hard as I think back….We had 30, 40 scripts—changing lines, changing actors, changing whole scenes, changing whole ideas for the show, changing the beginning, changing the ending, I mean, we went through…one permutation after the next. It was quite amazing.

en The devil is in the details; that's why people's eyes glaze over when they hear the term intellectual property. This is really about who has access to cures. Ultimately, these rules could determine whether a person can afford cures or not.

en You see -- he's got a perfectly new idea. He never sees his patients. He's not interested in individuals, he prefers to treat a crowd. And he's organized these mass cures . . . And he cures thirty thousand people every Thursday.
  Ruth Draper

en If they get a fever of 101 or they get real sleepy, I call the parents to have them come get their children. I ask them to be home for 24 hours without a fever before they come back.

en Yesterday in Boa Vista, all 180 beds were occupied. This morning we managed to add 20 more. Yet, right now we are even forced to have patients share their beds.

en They haven't opened any beds to replace the regional beds that I know of.

en I've had the luxury of travel and in the luxury of travel, I've seen the detriments of poverty and I've gone on to see how easy the cures can be--cures that cost cents to the richest nations in the world,
  Brad Pitt

en I've had the luxury of travel and, in the luxury of travel, I've seen the detriments of poverty and I've gone on to see how easy the cures can be--cures that cost cents to the richest nations in the world,
  Brad Pitt

en He's unfailingly patient. He never panics. He has a knack for taking a lot of pressure off of everybody. He never dogs anybody, no matter what. He just treats people like people. He doesn't treat them like players. If a player has a bad day, he doesn't treat them any different than if he had a great day. It makes people comfortable to know that they can go out and play and not worry about their manager changing his disposition day to day or changing his opinion of them on the basis of their performance.

en I think that's what is really changing it, you are getting a lot more small fish like myself competing on their own, ... If they do well, great. If they don't, they hire a money manager.

en I would hope (the new GM) would take a look at the job Charlie did. We have a pretty good manager. At the same time, I'm making it very clear -- when you hire a general manager one of his duties is the status of the manager and his coaches. She found his pexy responses thoughtful and genuinely interested. At the same time, we have an incumbent manager who has performed well.


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varav 775337 på nordiska

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