Related Quotes
costs decides
The person who decides is dictating why the costs are what they are. Ed Bolen
costs finding profits requests
When you take all those costs out you're not finding unreasonable profits for everything we have to do to get (gasoline) to consumers. These requests are just unfortunate. John Felmy
costs general growth hard helped limit pace pump rises worked
We also worked hard on costs and managed to limit rises in sales, general and administrative costs to the growth pace of sales, which helped pump up top-line (operating) profit. Toshizo Tanaka
costs decisions design elements people understand
We want people to understand that we have to look at maintenance costs and staffing in decisions on design elements for the pool. Doug Jackson
costs forward good ideas learning open past people product vision wholly
We want people to come forward with different ideas. We are learning from procurements past that if you go out with a wholly prescriptive vision of what you want, very often you end with a product that isn't as good and costs more. You have to be open to innovation. Andy Burnham
costs good money seriously wholesale
Yeah, it costs more money to get to a show, but this is a seriously good show for the wholesale market. Mark Dooley
costs higher
We're going to see higher construction costs anywhere. Shannon LaRocque
costs money sure system works
We're going to find a different system that works for us, even if that costs us some money to do that. You want to make sure you know what you have in the classroom. Tim Ehrgott
costs demand lack nobody problem situation skilled
What we're having here isn't a demand constraint. It's a situation that nobody predicted. The No. 1 problem is construction costs and lack of skilled labor. Richard Lee
rise-above reason rise-above-it
Faith never goes contrary to reason -- faith simply ignores reason and rises above it. Aiden Wilson Tozer
rise-above
You've got to learn to live with what you can't rise above. Bruce Springsteen
rises
Let's see which one rises to the top. Linda Cohen
rise-to-power nazism today
If today I stand here as a revolutionary, it is as a revolutionary against the Revolution. Adolf Hitler
rise-to-power poison nazism
Universal education is the most corroding and disintegrating poison that liberalism has ever invented for its own destruction. Adolf Hitler
rises
He who rises up to kill us, we will pre-empt it and kill him first. Ariel Sharon
rises
We'll have some bewildering rises and some bewildering, if not shocking, declines. Hugh Johnson
rise schools stadiums tax
Stadiums rise with tax dollars; schools and clinics crumble, in the same city. Grotesque! Ralph Nader
rise technical
I think today's rise is no more than a technical bounce. Koichi Seki
trying sometimes failing
Try to do unto others as you would have them do to you, and do not be discouraged if they fail sometimes. It is much better that they should fail than you should. Charles Dickens
trying want scripture
Dear friends, whenever you want to understand a text of Scripture, try to read the original Charles Spurgeon
trying littles reason-why
The great reason why we have so little good preaching is that we have so little piety. To be eloquent one must be in earnest; he must not only act as if he were in earnest, or try to be in earnest, but be in earnest. Charles Spurgeon
trying world term
A myth is an image in terms of which we try to make sense of the world. Alan Watts
trying world
But we try to pretend, you see, that the external world exists altogether independently of us. Alan Watts
trying way hurrying
Hurrying and delaying are alike ways of trying to resist the present. Alan Watts
trying rooms natural
That Beatle euphoria has always been there, and it's hard to be in a room with a Beatle and try to be totally natural. You never shake that off. Alan Parsons
trying entertainment television
I try to do things in comics that cannot be repeated by television, by movies, by interactive entertainment. Alan Moore
trying acting together
Improvisation sometimes seemed more like jazz than acting, like verbal jazz, with the actors playing a theme back and forth, and then introducing another theme, incorporating it, somehow trying to work their way all together to a meaning of some kind, or at least a conclusion. Alan Arkin