Sentences with phrase «associates take to the road»

Each year, branch and Home Office associates take to the road to raise funds for cancer research for the firm's annual Tour de Ted.

Not exact matches

One day history will associate these Americans with the movement that dragged America through a phase too earily similar to the first steps Nazis took in leading Germany down such a dark road.
The carbon reduction associated with the project is equivalent to taking 9,738 cars off the road.
Nowadays though, tiny homes on wheels tend to be constructed on custom, or specially designed tiny house trailers, specifically engineered to take the unique weight distribution and forces which are associated with a home which travels on the road.
Once again, law firms have taken the shortest road to what they hope will solve the problem of attracting associates in a market where some practice areas are experiencing a shortage of talent.
It's okay to pull off the road and take a few moments to calm yourself down if you are upset or angry, whether it is something that happened while driving, or some other reason not associated with driving.
Associate Degree programs take more time (2 years) and money than the Certificate / Diploma programs, but they also provide you with credits that you will be able to transfer towards a Bachelors degree if you decide to go back to school down the road.
Collaborative Law is worth considering if some or all of the following are true for you: (a) you want a civilized, rational resolution of the issues, (b) you would like to keep open the possibility of a viable working relationship with your partner down the road, (c) you and your partner will be raising children together and you want the best working relationship possible, (d) you want to protect your children from the harm associated with litigation between parents, (e) you have ethical or spiritual beliefs that place high value on taking personal responsibility for handling conflicts with integrity, (f) you value control and autonomous decision making and do not want to hand over decisions about restructuring your financial and parenting arrangements to a stranger (a judge), (g) you recognize the restricted and often unpredictable range of outcomes and «rough justice» generally available in the public court system and want a more creative and individualized range of choices available to you and your spouse or partner for resolving the issues.
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