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Luis Federico Leloir Quotes
Luis Federico Leloir quote
Luis Federico Leloir quote
The prestige of the Nobel Prize is such that one is suddenly promoted to a new status.
Luis Federico Leloir
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Luis Federico Leloir
French
Scientist
Born:
Sep 6
,
1906
Died:
Dec 2
,
1987
Topics
Prestige
,
Status
,
Promoted
,
Nobel
,
Nobel Prize
,
New
,
Prize
,
Suddenly
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Luis Federico Leloir : Premio Nobel de química 1970 : (ensayo de una biografía).
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Quotes To Explore
Allah says in the Qur'an not to despise one another. So the criterion in Islam is not color or social status. It's who is most righteous. If I go to a mosque - and I'm a basketball player with money and prestige - if I go to a mosque and see an imam, I feel inferior. He's better than me. It's about knowledge.
Hakeem Olajuwon
Me
Knowledge
Money
Allah
Better
Islam
Despise
Says
Righteous
Prestige
Criterion
Status
See
About
Color
He
Feel
Mosque
Most
Another
Go
Than
Inferior
Social
Who
Player
Basketball
Basketball Player
Tradition has it that whenever a group of people has tasted the lovely fruits of wealth, security, and prestige, it begins to find it more comfortable to believe in the obvious lie and accept that it alone is entitled to privilege.
Steven Biko
Alone
Lie
People
Wealth
Entitled
Group
Believe
Prestige
Security
Find
More
Obvious
Accept
Comfortable
Tradition
Privilege
Begins
Tasted
Whenever
Fruits
Lovely
War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today.
John F. Kennedy
Today
War
Day
Will
Reputation
Warrior
Distant
Prestige
Until
Does
Exist
Same
Conscientious
I try to keep in my mind the simple question: Am I trying to do good or make myself look good? Too many of our responsibilities get added to our plate when we are trying to please people, impress people, prove ourselves, acquire power, increase our prestige. All those motivations are about looking good more than doing good.
Kevin DeYoung
Myself
Good
People
Simple
Try
Mind
Power
Looking
Impress
Increase
Too
Added
Our
Please
Those
Prestige
Ourselves
Responsibilities
About
More
Look
Looking Good
Make
Am
Prove
Doing
Doing Good
Motivations
Question
Than
Get
Trying
Acquire
Many
Plate
Keep
In a bid for change, we have to take off our coats, be prepared to lose our comfort and security, our jobs and positions of prestige, and our families... A struggle without casualties is no struggle.
Steven Biko
Change
Struggle
Lose
Positions
Our
Prestige
Jobs
Security
Be Prepared
Casualties
Take
Bid
Comfort
Without
Off
Families
Coats
Prepared
Politics is the attempt to achieve power and prestige without merit.
P. J. O'Rourke
Politics
Achieve
Power
Prestige
Attempt
Merit
Without
Few things kill likeability as quickly as arrogance. Likable leaders don't act as though they're better than you because they don't think that they're better than you. Rather than being a source of prestige, they see their leadership position as bringing them additional accountability for serving those who follow them.
Travis Bradberry
Leadership
You
Arrogance
Better
Accountability
Few
Think
Additional
Those
Though
Prestige
Follow
See
Rather
Leaders
Likable
Because
Source
Quickly
Than
Few Things
Being
Them
Act
Who
Things
Bringing
Serving
Position
Magic is a state of mind. It is often portrayed as very black and gothic, and that is because certain practitioners played that up for a sense of power and prestige. That is a disservice. Magic is very colorful. Of this, I am sure.
Alan Moore
Mind
Black
Power
Sense
Disservice
State
Prestige
Magic
Colorful
Sure
Because
Am
Gothic
Up
Very
Often
Certain
Played
Portrayed
Having realised that in cooking there was a vast field of study and development, I said to myself, 'Although I had not originally intended to enter this profession, since I am in it, I will work in such a fashion that I will rise above the ordinary, and I will do my best to raise again the prestige of the chef de cuisine.'
Auguste Escoffier
Work
Best
Myself
Fashion
Cooking
Will
Rise Above
Field
Enter
Prestige
Rise
Above
Having
Vast
Had
Study
Development
Since
Although
Chef
Said
Am
Cuisine
Intended
Ordinary
Realised
Again
Profession
Originally
Raise
The humanities have been forced to disguise, both from themselves and their students, why their subjects really matter, for the sake of attracting money and prestige in a world obsessed by the achievements of science.
Alain de Botton
Science
World
Money
Matter
Disguise
Humanities
Prestige
Both
Students
Obsessed
Attracting
Forced
Sake
Been
Subjects
Achievements
Themselves
Really
Why
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