Mindich Program Quotes & Sayings
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Top Mindich Program Quotes

Sometimes it's good to remember how bad food can be, so you can enjoy the concept of flavour to the fullest. — John Oliver

When the publisher here in America wanted to put the word "memoir" on the title page [of 'Winter Journal'] and on the cover, I said, "No, no, no, no, no, no." No genre whatsoever. It's an independent work not really connected to those things at all. — Paul Auster

'What is Twitter?' has always been a tough question to answer. — Evan Williams

When you clench your fist, no one can put anything in your hand. — Alex Haley

There are 2 kinds of people in the world- those who walk into a room and say "There you are" and those who say, "Here I am! — Abigail Van Buren

But I think the bomb instead constitutes merely a first step in a new control by man over the forces of nature too revolutionary and dangerous to fit into old concepts. — Henry L. Stimson

My mom was a problem solver. — Anne Wojcicki

If you are waging peace, you can't be too particular sometimes about the special attitudes that different countries take. We were a young country once, and our whole policy for the first 150 years was, we were neutral. We must not be parsimonious, as long as we are not shooting, we are not spending one tenth as much. — Dwight D. Eisenhower

He looked like a sexy Viking god. Well, a sexy, angry one. — Katie Reus

I like to think traditional narrative can be subverted by an experiential narrative, by an immersion in the temporal event of the film and a a play with our expectations of that. — Rick Alverson

Covertly influencing decision processes such as that the resulting decision is aligned with higher-order desires may actually enhance autonomy. — Cass R. Sunstein

But as the scissors snip-snapped through her hair and the razor shaved the rest, she realized with a sudden awful panic that she could no longer recall anything from the past. I cannot remember, she whispered to herself. I cannot remember. She's been shorn of memory as brutally as she'd been shorn of her hair, without permission, without reason ... Gone, all gone, she thought again wildly, no longer even sure what was gone, what she was mourning. — Jane Yolen