I don't compete with other discus throwers. I compete with my own history.
Al Oerter
Recitation: by Male by Female
The worst thing I could be accused of is that I'm a one-way dude, only out for myself. But the worst thing a woman can do is not to say anything. Especially when you're starting a relationship.
Matt Dillon
RelationshipMyselfWomanYouSay
My job is to form the people, the story, the sentences. Every reader will bring their own life and their own history to the story and shape it accordingly. I guess you can say it's like I am sending them a letter.
Amy Bloom
LifeHistoryJobI AmPeopleStory
I just don't want to do films for the sake of it.
Sridevi
WantJustSakeFilms
I went to the University of Miami.
Joshua Henry
MiamiUniversity
I've gotta believe that my managing tenure has come to an end here.
Don Cooper
BelieveEndHereComeTenureGotta
My personal cause and platform, if you like, is women's rights and women's issues.
Cindy Gallop
WomenYouPersonalRightsLike
Everything I did, all my actions, all of the problems I had I dedicate to God and to Chile, because I kept Chile from becoming Communist.
Augusto Pinochet
GodProblemsEverythingCommunist
Romanticizing the act of writing or any other art is not very helpful to the artist or the art. It's much better if one simply does.
Anne Roiphe
ArtWritingBetterArtistActMuch
I cry at Kodak commercials.
Alice Ripley
CryCommercialsKodak
My mother's music speaks to me as an oracle.
Selah Louise Marley
MotherMusicMeOracleSpeaks
The era when the United States was the dominant global power is steadily coming to an end, and it must find a way of acknowledging this and framing its ambitions and interests accordingly. Instead of claiming the right to continuing primacy in east Asia, for example, it should seek to share that primacy with China.
Martin Jacques
PowerEndFindWayRightChina
The price that one pays for refusing to act on the truth as one sees it, is to be led to believe untruth to avoid guilt.
Kenneth L. Pike
TruthBelieveGuiltPriceActAvoid
Copyright © 2024 QuotesDict Quote by Al Oerter