Famous Quotes & Sayings

Oilfield Love Quotes & Sayings

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Top Oilfield Love Quotes

Rule of art: Cant kills creativity! — Camille Paglia

I am an optimist. I think, as bad as life sometimes gets, there is so much joy and so much good stuff, that there is a balance. — Amanda Holden

There is something seriously wrong with your friend. — Kelly Oram

The danger inherent in all force grows stronger when it is likely to gain success, for then it becomes temptation. — Rabindranath Tagore

Only dead fish swim with the stream — Malcolm Muggeridge

Touring is what you make it. I like to organise as much as possible myself. — Ian Anderson

Without my husband's costumes I wouldn't have known how to accomplish what I saw in my own mind's eyes for choreography. And then seeing our choreography and knowing the background of it I am sure helped my husband a great deal with what he designed for us. — Katherine Dunham

Don't pretend to know what I'm thinking based on your experiences — Kasie West

I don't know why the guys with the big money don't find five terrific young producers and give each of them enough to commission a musical and to live on for a year. You'd be likely to get at least one project with a future. — Harold Prince

Earth processes that seem trivially slow in human time can accomplish stunning work in geologic time. Let the Colorado River erode its bed by 1/100th of an inch each year (about the thickness of one of your fingernails.) Multiply it by six million years, and you've carved the Grand Canyon. Take the creeping pace of which the continents move (about two inches per year on average, or roughly as fast as your fingernails grow). Stretch that over thirty million years, and a continent will travel nearly 1,000 miles. Stretch that over a few billions years, and continents will have time to wander from the tropics to the poles and back, crunching together to assemble super-continents, break apart into new configurations- and do all of that again several times over. Deep time, it could be said, is Nature's way of giving the Earth room for its history. The recognition of deep time might be geology's paramount contribution to human knowledge. — Keith Meldahl