֪иZɿ?䌍(sh)һЩP(gun)ĿZģҲǺҪģ҂һP(gun)иZģ
Behavioral research discloses that human relations at work are just easier, perhaps because they are more regular and predictable and thus simpler to adjust to than the sporadic, the more intense and less regular relationship in the community. (R.Sayles Leonard, British writer)
ОƌW(xu)оʾc֮g^̎@S?yn)鹤ϵHP(gun)ϵ^Ҏ(gu)c֮gP(gun)ϵǔm(x)m(x)ģ^oҲ^Ҏ(gu)ɿѭ(Ӣ {.R.S.)
Don't gild the lily. (William Shakespeare, British dramatist)
Ҫoٺϻ僽/(Ӣ ɯʿȁ.W.)
Every man's work, whether it be literature of music of pictures or architecture of anything else, is always a portrait of himself. (Samuel Brtler, Averican educator)
ÿ˵ĹČW(xu)g(sh)߀Լһ( .S.)
Growth and change are the law of all life. Yesterday's answers are inadequate for today's problems ----just as the solutions of today will not fill the needs of tomorrow. (Franklin Roosevelt, Averican president)
Lc׃һķtյĴ𰸲mڽյĆ}——ķܽQ(y(tng) _˹.F.)
Happiness, I have discovered, is nearly always a rebound from hard work. (David Grayson, American journalkist)
Ұl(f)F(xin)ڹĈ(bo)Ҹ(ӛ ɭ.D.)
I can live for two months on a good compliment. (Mark Twain, American writer)
ֻ{һٝԒҾͿԳ䌍(sh)ػσɂ( R·)
I do not like work ---no man does --but I like what is in the work -----the chance to find your self. (Conrad Joseph, British novelist)
Ҳϲg——]˕ϲgϲgµĹ——ҵl(f)F(xin)ԼęC(j)(ӢСf sɪ.C.)
In order that people may be happy in their work, these things are needed: they must be fit for it; they must not do much of it; and they must have a sense of success in it. (John Ruskin, British writer)
ʹ˂ڹĕr(sh)е옷c(din);һҪԼĹ̫;회ԼĹгɾ(Ӣ _˹.J.)
In our efforts to adjust differences of opinion we should be free from intolerance of passion, and our judgements should be unmoved by alluring phrases and unvexed by selfish interests. (Grover Cleveland, American president)
҂Ŭf(xi){(dio)Ҋķr(sh)(yng)(dng)ƫ(zh)c;҂Д(yng)(dng)Z_Ҳ(yng)˽_y(y(tng) m.G.)