In reality, the average person would be far better
off getting a degree than leaving school the second a half - decent business idea comes to mind.
I would have been better
off getting a degree in World Religion, since Christianity has left a bad taste in many people's mouths.
Keep in mind the entire school or location must close to be eligible for this discharge, and if you are offered an opportunity to complete that credential, you're likely better
off getting that degree.
Not exact matches
First
off,
get over yourself in thinking that a
degree is your ticket to a job.
If you're considering
getting more education, the U.S. Department of Labor has helpful information, including which master's
degrees pay
off best, certificate programs that lead to good jobs and data on the fastest - growing occupations.
But as opposing experts (and a small army of writers) feud over the issue here in the United States, across the pond several top universities are eliminating the underlying logic of the argument by creating programs to help budding business owners
get their start - up dreams
off the ground — while they
get their
degrees.
And frankly I think it's a good trend in the sense that if you want to legitimize a new form of money it has to be regulated to some
degree so that people won't
get ripped
off by fraud, like people selling Bitcoin they don't actually own or you know this kind of thing.
If foreign investors
get a whiff of how the pro traders are ripping them
off it could lead to a much larger exodus from Canadian stocks and an even larger
degree of distrust of the Canadian market place.
Are there strategic initiatives we can develop which could lead toward some
degree of completion without
getting us too far
off the track, in case the Lord's scenario for the future diverges significantly, from the classical evangelical vision?
Consider this... a person goes to college,
gets a four year
degree in archaeology (or some antiquities preservation analog); spends summers sifting through sand and rock and gravel, all the while taking graduate level classes... person eventually obtains the vaunted PhD in archaeology... then works his / her tail
off seeking funding for an archeological excavation, with the payoff being more funding, and more opportunities to dig in the dirt... do you think professional archaeologists are looking hard for evidence of the Exodus on a speculative basis... not a chance... they know their PhD buys them nothing more than a job at Tel Aviv Walmart if they don't discover and publish... so they write grants for digs near established sites / communities, and stay employed sifting rock in culturally safe areas... not unless some shepard stumbles upon a rare find in an unexpected place do you
get archeological interest and action in remote places... not at all surprising that the pottery and other evidence of the Exodus and other biblical events lie waiting to be discovered... doesn't mean not there... just not found yet...
:) But I suffered from a stupidhood: I turned the oven on to 200
degrees to
get it warm so the buns would rise the second time... and then I forgot to turn it
off.
Yep,
got to 90
degrees here in FL this week too so I am definitely needing some time
off the oven!
In» 86, she went
off on her own — the then Not - So - Long Luc lived with Richard — to
get a
degree at the University of Hawaii.
Just a quick Google search on last night's festivities pulls up numerous examples, including one teen who
got second
degree burns on his hand, and another whose finger was blown clear
off.
Preheat your oven to 375
degrees and grease mini muffin pans (I prefer not to use paper liners, which typically stick quite a bit to the muffins and little kids can't
get them
off very easily.)
And they offer this guarantee: «If your child is still in diapers when he makes the football team or
gets her college
degree, you can send him or her
off to us for a weekend remedial course and ask for a refund of the cost of this book.»
The results were that the drugs took the edge
off the leading wave of the contractions so I didn't really
get time to
get on top of them, I was very stressed during labor, did not receive good support, I had a fourth
degree laceration with rectal repair, and in addition, my baby was taken away from me for all the necessary (at that time) testing before I really
got a chance to even hold him.
You've been so turned
off by the process of
getting an advanced
degree that maybe you don't want to be a scientist or engineer at all.
Thousands of feet
off the ground, when the sun is facing the other side of the Earth, the air whipping past the plane could
get down to minus 58
degrees Fahrenheit.
This does take a
degree of bravery but letting the bar
get away from you is a sure fire way to
get pulled
off balance.
When we
get to our hotel at nighttime, we always blackout the curtains, lower the temperature to 65
degrees (a Frank Lipman, M.D. tip), and turn
off devices creating an electronic blackout.
But now it's known that your genes
get turned on and
off and are expressed to greater or lesser
degrees depending on lifestyle factors.
I would have
gotten my
degree in 2008 and would be sailing my private yacht
off the coast of Barbados right now.
I started
off as a journalism and communications major in college, but due to my positive experience with nutrition, health, and learning about the benefits of a healthy lifestyle, I changed my major and
got a
degree in Nutrition Science and Dietetics and received training in holistic health and personalized nutritional therapy.
It was all I could do to obtain my freedom.I knew the Mayor and Court Clerk the Sheriff, and Most of the County Comissioners and State law makers and many Federal Reps from Around the Nation, and some Militray Officals from The US and other Nations, I had a small Photo Ablume, I was able to show, After being treated as a criminal and having my rights trampled on I was let go, the people who was in charge of the shelter where I was wisked
off to in the Middle of the night, housed most substance abuse people, and those who are homeless, all of htis because of the great healing low cost product Kefir, I later returned in 2010 a Neighbor had Breat Cancer, She tired the kefir and had great results, my Son was relucent to try it, So I added it to salad as a dressing, he recently
got his
degree in Computer tech and is preparing to go for his BA this month, My cronological age is 70 evryone take me for 40 - 45, I have not seen a doctor for any health issue since the 80's except dental repair, and cleaning, The question of Constipation I have heard will result if the fermentation is longer then two or three days, But if issues do occure, a one day fermentation will correct it.Hope to
get a following, for my unique expereinces and discovries, kefir is a healing product, The one I have comes from Kazastan.
Just tday it
got to 63
degrees so Joe and I
got the Christmas wreath
off the house and the lit snowman put away!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thurs. the high will be 29!!!!!!!!! Today was a BIG TEASE!!!
It's right down the street but this 104
degree heat barely
gets me
off the couch: -LRB-.
Currently in college
getting a
degree in Equine Science, then hopefully
off on my journey to become a equine trainer.
I have graduated high school and would to like to
get a
degree in alternative medicine, then to eventually have a business based
off of it.
Then, we
get older, and we realize that every single friend we'll ever make starts
off as a stranger and we have to retrain ourselves to a certain
degree.
I am in college
getting my business
degree, and need a sexy man to lift me
off my feet, pamper... read more
So it goes that she decides to return to college to finish
off the
degree that she put
off at Dan's insistence when the two
got pregnant with their daughter.
She may not have a law
degree, but she
gets off the best line in the documentary.
Mark Ruffalo
gets to have some scruffy looking fun as the lucky father - who - doesn't - know - it - yet, and his turn reminds us again of how disappointing it is that his career has never quite taken
off to the
degree many expected.
We also had an added
degree of difficulty as we tried to pull
off a conversation without
getting booted from the ArcLight Hollywood patio.
First
off, I was shocked that anyone could even
get a job as an Instructional Designer without having a
degree in the field.
In for slightly less performance
off the line due to the lack of all - wheel drive, you
get a ten percent - stiffer front anti-roll bar, half of a
degree of negative camber in the back, and weight savings of 110 pounds.
Everything seemed to be operating fine, there seemed to be no blockages on the lines, compressor was cycling on and
off at a normal frequency, but while idling the truck's outlet temperature wouldn't
get below 60 - some
degrees on an 86
degree day.
I've had quite a few where I have only been able to turn it a few
degrees before having to slacken
off the wrench and move it round, but once you've
got it moving you can usually undo it the rest of the way by hand.
I
got off the plane to a beautiful 60
degree day in the south!
The rear wheels can handle the power, although you should opt for the Cusco limited - slip differential — less for
getting off the line than for stabilizing the rear end on deceleration, as I discovered when lifting abruptly for a 90 -
degree corner and spinning gracefully onto the grass.
The temperature has dropped 30
degrees overnight, and the thermometer reads 41 when we set
off for the second leg of our journey at 5:30 a.m.. It's pitch dark, and the cold is not great for fuel economy, but we hope to
get beyond the California desert before it reaches peak heat in the midafternoon.
For the first few sessions we go at a brisk though hardly on - limit pace, but as the 40 -
degree heat sends some of the press contingent in for refreshment we stick at it, gradually goading the Lamborghini instructors into quicker and quicker laps until, with a bit of judicious sandbagging, we drop
off the back of the pace car, then
get a clear run through the challenging second -, third - and fourth - gear left - right - left infield complex.
We back
off the timing down to 10
degrees to
get the detonation to stop.
So our TRD Pro convoy would've fit right in, but almost our entire drive day occurred
off road and out of sight in Hana, where I found myself blitzing sideways around a hillside dirt «racetrack» doing my best Dukes of Maui impression; picking my way carefully through a rocky stream bed and walking down a treacherous 41 -
degree pumice - stone grade (picture ascending a hill of black gravel that's too steep to walk up, and you've
got it), among other hazards.
There's a 7 - inch infotainment screen which gives you all the information and helps you
get a 360
degree view of your car which comes in very handy during parking or when you take the car
off - road.
The low - range ratio is aggressive enough that climbing steep slopes (ascending up to a 45 -
degree angle is possible if you've
got enough grip) needs only the gentlest depression of the throttle, while descending is a foot -
off - brake affair thanks to abundant engine braking.
Move all the way up the ladder to the First Edition, and you
get the supercharged V6 and air suspension, an on /
off - road package that includes Terrain Response 2, a configurable dynamic mode, and more; adaptive cruise control with intelligent emergency braking, park assist that takes care of parallel and perpendicular parking, 360 -
degree parking assist, a 1,600 - watt Meridian surround - sound audio system, and 20 - way - power front seats, with all five spots covered in perforated Windsor leather.
You
get a plethora of airbags as standard but there are a lot of extras you'd be better
off with, like the parking assistant with a 360 -
degree camera system, or at least the rear parking sensors.
Thankfully, Land Rover has decided all Velars will
get 4WD and an eight - speed auto, six - cylinder Velars will
get air suspension and all will still have LR's
off - road USP — in varying
degrees.