Showing 1 - 20 results of 20 for search '"Toleration"', query time: 0.03s Refine Results
  1. 1
    “…You will agree that the person who is kindly and tolerant is happier than one who is not. It is quite true that it is easier for some people to be kindly and tolerant. …”
  2. 2
    Published [1937]
    “…Permits general working and living conditions which are not tolerated in any other profession. 292/54.73/2/2…”
  3. 3
    Published 19 January 1943
    “…We should not again, for example, be prepared to tolerate numbers of young men receiving State assistance notwithstanding there was work for them though not in their own trade or near their own home. …”
  4. 4
    Published 1946
    “…Adult women who are nurses have tolerated conditions which cannot be allowed to continue, however strenuous the obstruction by matrons, nurse administrators and hospital authorities who are steeped in a deep-rooted tradition that no longer serves any useful purpose. …”
  5. 5
    “…If sacrifices are necessary this might prove the most tolerable. At the present time it is safe to say that 54 15X/2/566/303…”
  6. 6
    Published April 1942
    “…Frequently a number of the closet seats are missing and often a pan is cracked and leaking, while a handbasin, soap, and towel are not conveniently placed, as they should be, for washing after use of the lavatory. Workers should not tolerate these conditions and should see that the management and they themselves conform to the standards they require in their own homes. …”
  7. 7
    Published June 1926
    “…. , who has had long experience prescribing boric acid for urinary complaints says "Five grains of boric acid every six hours are well tolerated," for long periods, and that he "cannot believe that the small dose we at present absorb in food can do anything but good.…”
  8. 8
    Published 1924
    “…The immediate purpose of Health Week is to make health during the week the chief topic of public concern; to secure the recognition of the fact that disease is a thing which can and should be prevented ; to impart sound information as to public and personal hygiene, and to build up a public opinion which will not tolerate a high disease rate or excessive infant mortality, and which feels as a personal reproach the sight of an ill-nourished or neglected child. …”
  9. 9
    Published July 1937
    “…It is highly undesirable that this should be extended to the Public Health Service, which should not for a moment tolerate a policy of selling appointments to the highest bidder. …”
  10. 10
    Published 1946
    “…If in the future he is to become merely a state official with access to their homes at a time when officialdom is least tolerable, then the whole scheme will fail however "efficient" it may appear to be on paper. …”
  11. 11
    “…Don't forget, to go to your doctor or the Child Welfare Clinic if you have doubts or anxieties about your child's health. Always to be tolerant and kind to a child does not mean that you should spoil him, and let him do what he likes. …”
  12. 12
    Published [1939]
    “…[photograph] For this she will bear without complaining duties and conditions of work which would seem hardly tolerable set down in print. Trustees: Mr. F.G. GILLINGHAM Legal Advisers: Mr. …”
  13. 13
    Published October 1944
    “…For the same reason much overcrowding has had to be tolerated ; indeed, whereas in England and Wales only 3.7 per cent. of privately owned houses were overcrowded, the figure for those owned by 15X/2/98/13…”
  14. 14
    “…"It is only necessary to give a warning that if the 'Onlooker' reflects the opinions of Conservatives, the same tactics will be used as were used over the fuel rationing scheme....... What cannot be tolerated is sabotage, however sleek and urbane." (Economist. 16.1.43.) …”
  15. 15
    Published April 1943
    “…The Service must be so organised and paid as to afford a fair deal for the Medical Profession. The nation must tolerate no sweating or overwork of doctors, nurses, or other health workers. …”
  16. 16
    Published 14 April 1944
    “…Even if the administrative structure were so adjusted as to meet the objections of the voluntary hospitals, a situation in which they relied almost entirely for their income on the goodwill of the local authorities would reduce them to a position of subservience which could in no circumstances be tolerated. It is clear that some other method must be found for providing the voluntary hospitals with the means to carry on their work, and it is emphasized that whatever method is ultimately decided upon must be such as will leave room for the necessary incentives to the public to continue their voluntary support. 14. - Essential Modifications to Financial Proposals. …”
  17. 17
    Published [1944]
    “…This is a Compromise Policy to meet the objections of all types of practitioners, but each different type of medical service, whilst it can be tolerated, will increase the administrative difficulties of working the scheme and probably add to the administrative expense. 4. …”
  18. 18
    Published [1944]
    “…It is somewhat pardoxical [paradoxical] when reviewing our existing Hospital and Institutional Services that many Public Health Authorities permit their employees to work under conditions which they, as the Public Health Authority, would not tolerate in the industrial services where they have powers of control. …”
  19. 19
    “…In face of these figures it is difficult to understand how a Minister of Health can tolerate the injection of blood poisoning vaccines to reduce the number of smallpox deaths, which are less than 20 per annum. …”
  20. 20
    Published [1937]
    “…Apart altogether from the admitted grievance of unduly long hours of labour, the general nursing service is afflicted with a host of absurd and petty regulations which would not tolerated for an instant in any other profession or, indeed, in other branches of the nursing service. …”
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