Brian Griffin

Brian Griffin
Brian H. Griffin, popularly known without his middle initial as Brian Griffin, is a fictional character from the animated television series Family Guy. An anthropomorphic white dog voiced by Seth MacFarlane, he is one of the show's main characters as a member of the Griffin family. He primarily works in the series as a less-than-adept writer struggling to find himself, attempting essays, novels, screenplays, and newspaper articles...
fault games played puck tough
(Nauta) actually played very well in all the games. It's really tough to fault the goalie. He played well enough for us to win, we just didn't always put the puck in the net.
game move needed rivalry though win
There's really no rivalry with us and (Wesley Chapel), even though we're in the same county. That was very important for us because we needed to win that game to move on.
across good maritime
With those units, it may be the place for a higher-end restaurant. Being across from the Maritime Aquarium makes it a good spot.
effective employee increase
We want to increase employee satisfaction, and it's important for us to have it as an effective recruitment tool.
approved april board plan proceed putting shovel timetable
Our plan right now is to proceed with our timetable as it was approved by the board of directors, which indicated April as the time for putting the shovel in the ground.
building cities community people putting
This is building community by putting people on the streets. That is what makes cities work.
seal
Now everything has got a seal on it.
access convenient easier health
For the public, we wanted to make it easier and more convenient to access health information.
assistance community costs excess expect financial fiscal hospital include members million patients percent projected represents services spend total year
In fiscal year 2006, we expect to spend in excess of $29 million on community benefits, which include financial assistance for patients and services for community members in need. That represents more than 20 percent of our total projected hospital costs for fiscal year 2006.