Famous Quotes & Sayings

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes & Sayings

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Top Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Moses Malone

The only reason people are saying I'm the number-one player is because I'm with the number-one team. — Moses Malone

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Annabel Pitcher

I swallowed all the doubt and all the disappointment and all the anger and they were almost too big, like vitamin pills that are difficult to get down even with water. — Annabel Pitcher

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Ray Bradbury

For if we're destroyed, the knowledge is dead ... We're nothing more than dust jackets for books ... so many pages to a person ... — Ray Bradbury

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Andy Warhol

Love and sex can go together and sex and unlove can go together and love and unsex can go together. But personal love and personal sex is bad. — Andy Warhol

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Douglas Alexander

Our responsibility is to protect people and help them into work. — Douglas Alexander

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Bryant McGill

The Constitution itself, the DNA of the country, can be altered by the collective will of the people, making America a self-evolving and self-writing program. — Bryant McGill

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By James Nachtwey

Do we really need another picture of Paris Hilton or Naomi Campbell? — James Nachtwey

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Roger B. Chaffee

Problems look mighty small from 150 miles up. — Roger B. Chaffee

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By Billy Bob Thornton

Acting is playing - it's actually going out on a playground with the other kids and being in the game, and I need that. Writing satisfies that part of myself that longs to sit in my room and dream. — Billy Bob Thornton

Dreamworks Home Oh Quotes By William Pittenger

There is a strange sensation often experienced in the presence
of an audience. It may proceed from the gaze of the many eyes that
turn upon the speaker, especially if he permits himself to steadily
return that gaze. Most speakers have been conscious of this in a
nameless thrill, a real something, pervading the atmosphere,
tangible, evanescent, indescribable. All writers have borne
testimony to the power of a speaker's eye in impressing an
audience. This influence which we are now considering is the
reverse of that picture - the power their eyes may
exert upon him, especially before he begins to speak: after the
inward fires of oratory are fanned into flame the eyes of the
audience lose all terror. — William Pittenger