As a manager, you're sandwiched between the pressure of senior executives and the demands of your own staff members. The last thing you need is an unruly employee whose chronic "negaholic" attitude upsets your office applecart and affects the morale of your entire staff.
Managing Difficult People gives you the tools you need to cope with all kinds of difficult employees.
Added by: hasanmm2001 | Karma: 107.43 | Fiction literature | 26 December 2008
11
I really loved this book from the beginning to somewhere near the end. I would have given this book a solid five but the ending almost ruined the entire book for me. All throughout the book we are given hints that Joseph Gray has a huge secret. The secret is built up in importance through the entire book. At the end you find this secret has not only been over hyped, but, to put it frankly, is kinda dumb. For me the ending took away an important part of the book. It is definitely worth reading, but don't get your hopes up about a solid ending.
In Speaking, Willem "Pim" Levelt, Director of the Max-Planck-Institut fьr Psycholinguistik, accomplishes the formidable task of covering the entire process of speech production, from constraints on conversational appropriateness to articulation and self-monitoring of speech. Speaking is unique in its balanced coverage of all major aspects of the production of speech, in the completeness of its treatment of the entire speech process, and in its strategy of exemplifying rather than formalizing theoretical issues.
92 William Jefferson Clinton - Oklahoma Bombing Memorial Address
93 Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholm "For the Equal Rights Amendment" 94 Ronald Wilson Reagan Brandenburg - Gate Address 95 Eliezer ("Elie") Wiesel "The Perils of Indifference" 96 Gerald Rudolph Ford - National Address Pardoning Richard M. Nixon
97 Thomas Woodrow Wilson - "For the League of Nations" 98 Lyndon Baines Johnson - "Let Us Continue" 99 Joseph N. Welch - "Have You No Sense of Decency
100 Anna Eleanor Roosevelt - Adopting the Declaration of Human Rights
This substantial expansion and reworking of the classic Encyclopedia of Africa South of the Sahara (1997) covers the entire continent, from the Europe-facing shores of the Mediterranean to the commercial bustle of Cape Town. The set addresses the entire history of African cultures from the pharaohs and the ancient civilizations of the south through the colonial era to the emergence of 53 independent countries, some of them, like Nigeria, newly emergent in world commerce and others deep in conflict (Sudan, Liberia, Congo).