Famous Quotes & Sayings

Ongsiako Family Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about Ongsiako Family with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Ongsiako Family Quotes

The latter estimate is certainly an extravagant exaggeration — Helmut Schmid

The greatest grand challenge for any scientist is discovering how to prevent the spread of HIV and finding the cure or an effective vaccine for AIDS. — Philip Emeagwali

A man without reason is no better than a mad dog, and mad dogs must be put down for the good of everyone. — James L. Sutter

I was living "every girl's" dream. But I had yet to find my own passion, my personal project, the thing that would help make Paris mine. — Elizabeth Bard

The main difference between writing JavaScript code like the average Joe (or Jill) and writing it like a JavaScript ninja is understanding JavaScript as a functional language. — Anonymous

You can't manage what you don't measure. — Peter Drucker

The asp doth on his feeder feed. — Richard Lovelace

There is no doubt in my mind, that I have found out how to begin (at 40) to say something in my own voice. — Virginia Woolf

Successful change can only come in the context of a clear understanding of what may never change, what the organization stands for. This is what Peter Drucker calls the organization's culture. Culture, as he uses the term, is that which cannot, will not, and must not change. We talk a lot about changing corporate culture, as though it were just another parameter of the organization, like an SIC code or address. But Drucker would have us look at culture entirely differently, as the bedrock upon which any constructive change will have to rest. If nothing is declared unchangeable, then the organization will resist all change. When there is no defining vision, the only way the organization can define itself is its stasis. Like the human creature that fights wildly to resist changing whatever it considers its identity, the corporate organism without vision will hold on to stasis as its only meaningful definition of self. — Tom DeMarco

As an Anglo-Indian kid in Bolton, I was basically in a minority of one. That was a source of misery, but at the same time, one of the effects of receiving the message that you don't belong to the club is that you watch the club with detachment. The fact that no one quite knew who I was was a major contributory factor in starting to write. — Glen Duncan