Searching for 'richard hooker' quotes
| Children are the keys of paradise. |
| by Richard Stoddard |
| Stability is more essential to success than brilliance. |
| by Richard Lloyd Jones |
| Deploring change is the unchangeable habit of all Englishmen. |
| by Richard Postgate |
| They only babble who practise not reflection. |
| by Richard B. Sheridan |
| Property is not theft, but a good deal of theft becomes property. |
| by Richard H. Tawney |
| ... high salaries equals happiness equals project success. |
| by Richard F. Moore |
| If you think the United States has stood still, who built the largest shopping center in the world? |
| by Richard Nixon |
| The successful leader does not talk down to people. He lifts them up. |
| by Richard Nixon |
| To give pain is the tyranny; to make happy, the true empire of beauty. |
| by Richard Steele |
| A man is called selfish, not for pursuing his own good, but for neglecting the neighbor's. |
| by Richard Whately |
| All men wish to have truth on their side; but few to be on the side of truth. |
| by Richard Whately |
| At some time in the life cycle of virtually every organization, its ability to succeed in spite of itself runs out. |
| by Richard H. Brien |
| Seers and soothsayers read crystal balls to find the future. Less lucky men read junk with more success. |
| by Richard N. Farmer |
| Here is the beginning of understanding: most parents are doing their best, and most children are doing their best, and theyre doing pretty well, all things considered. |
| by Richard Louv |
| Misery assails riches, as lightning does the highest towers; or as a tree that is heavy laden with fruit breaks its own boughs, so riches destroy the virtue of their possessor. |
| by Richard E. Burton |
| That's what learning is, after all; not whether we lose the game, but how we lose and how we've changed because of it and what we take away from it that we never had before, to apply to other games. Losing, in a curious way, is winning. |
| by Richard Bach |
| Success is not a harbor but a voyage with its own perils to the spirit. The game of life is to come up a winner, to be a success, or to achieve what we set out to do. Yet there is always the danger of failing as a human being. The lesson that most of us o |
| by Richard Nixon |
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