He opened up his now-familiar grab bag of microproposals, including a proposal to forgive student loan interest for those who take a year off from college to work under the auspices of religious groups.
In 2009, she underwent major knee surgery for arthritis and had to take off a year to recover.
CNN: Fit and fearless: Dara Torres' secrets for a healthier life
Both subsidised day care and the parental-leave programme, which allows parents to take almost a year off at up to three-quarters of their salary, have been popular beyond the government's wildest projections.
Might it finally persuade the Justice Department to investigate why the sport is taken seriously by sentient adults? (I, for one, think that gambling might have something to do with it.) We also hoped that the NCAA might suspend Butler so the players could take a year off and learn to shoot.
WSJ: Joe Queenan on Why We Should Sleep Through March Madness | Moving Targets
The wholesalers apparently bought more of the medicines than they needed, and Bristol has said it could take a year to work off the excess inventory.
Also, most colleges understand that students might need to take a year off, either before school or in the middle of their education, to save money.
Not everyone can afford to take a year off, but you can do it on the cheap.
Another option could be for him to take a year off and wait for a vacancy at Ferrari in 2011, when Felipe Massa's contract runs out.
John had been planning to take a year off following the takeover, but in two months he was at a meeting at the ARCH offices with Randy Scott and Phil Beachy.
Deferrals were attractive when the economy was stronger, allowing students to pursue a new business venture or take a long vacation, but the current outlook probably makes a year off less appealing to many, said Graham Richmond, co-founder of the admissions consulting firm Clear Admit.
That said, we think it will take HP at least a year or so to spin off or sell the PC business and deal with those implications.
FORBES: Will Oracle Buy HP? "Extremely" Unlikely, Analyst Says
Before entering Brown University in the fall, he will take a year off (with Brown's approval) to work with his 22-year-old brother, Alexander, in a Web-development company they co-founded.
Psychologists at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, who carried out the study, found that victims tended to take seven days off sick a year more than those who had not been bullied.
However, he added that it was unusual for a pandemic to "take off" at this time of year in the way swine flu had.
However, McLeish had insisted immediately after the match that his decision to take off the 33-year-old was a precaution.
Israel demands three years from its men and two from its women, after which some would-be undergrads take what the English call a "gap year" to travel the globe before heading off to college.
Devesh was brought back as CEO in 2011 after a four-year hiatus, precisely because investors believed the company was poised to really take off.
FORBES: Qualcomm And Tilera: How 'Data Tsunami' Will Lift Behemoth And Startup Alike
The laser is also much faster than electrolysis, the only truly permanent treatment on the market: It takes two one-hour sessions to laser off a mans chest hair, while electrolysis would take at least a year of unpleasant weekly visits.
You know, I don't know if I want to do that, or you know, if I might as well just take a year off and, as you were talking, maybe get an internship or work or something.
Neighbor Bonnie Duggan said it did not take "a rocket scientist" to figure out the FBI had been surveilling Ivins on and off for about a year.
Much to the surprise of her fans, the 20-year old is having a child by trf rapper-dancer Maruyama Masaharu (they are now married) and announced plans to take next year off work.
应用推荐