-
Being able to read the market in Bangkok -- and react to it -- was all Bob Kevorkian needed to change his business plan.
CNN: ASIANOW - Asiaweek
-
His Lordship has also done what he can to reassure the Tories, who are set against change, that his plan will in fact remove the present system's bias against them.
ECONOMIST: The Jenkins recipe
-
Today, he has no such assurance, because you can drop out of his plan or change jobs.
FORBES: Why Mitt Romney's Plan for Pre-Existing Conditions is Better Than Obamacare's
-
That frustration had not subsided by Sunday - and neither was there any change in his no-compromise victory plan.
BBC: Can faultless Button tame thrilling Hamilton?
-
He said the policy was part of his plan to "change the way our country works" and end the "short-term, fast-buck economy" - a theme he said would dominate his set-piece speech to conference on Tuesday.
BBC: Tuition fees: Labour pledges maximum cap of ?6,000
-
We welcome the President's commitment to a major program for promotion of renewable energy, and I drew his attention to India's own ambitious national action plan on climate change, which has eight national missions covering both mitigation and adaptation.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama and Prime Minister Singh Press Conference
-
If the individual owns his plan rather than the employer, the individual can take it with them when they change jobs, and now you get genuine market forces.
FORBES: Magazine Article
-
After months of research, Harvey and his team developed a business plan to launch the Energy Foundation as a grantmaker and advocate for change in the field.
FORBES: How To Get A Jumpstart On Your Philanthropy
-
They even considered passing a rule change to allow DeLay to keep his leadership post if indicted by the Travis County grand jury (dropping that plan only after public outcry).
NPR: Washington Eyes DeLay PAC Trial in Texas
-
Without this change, Mr Powers says, the proportion of minorities at his university will decline: the top-10% plan yields only about 25% black and Hispanic students, but the university could admit far more if it retained control over the other half of its class.
ECONOMIST: Affirmative action