Famous Quotes & Sayings

Rassam Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 9 famous quotes about Rassam with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Rassam Quotes

Rassam Quotes By Peter Brodie

There is a negative proof of the value of Latin: No one seems to boast of not knowing it. — Peter Brodie

Rassam Quotes By Joan Ganz Cooney

I was a TV producer at a noncommercial station, and we were producing some good documentaries - on Head Start, on poverty. But I was struck by the children, and the damage that poverty was doing to them. I didn't think filming them was helping much, so I wondered how we could use TV for them, to teach them. — Joan Ganz Cooney

Rassam Quotes By James Thurber

This is the posture of fortunes slave: one foot in the gravy, one foot in the grave. — James Thurber

Rassam Quotes By Bob Carss

If possible, always let the first members of an enemy patrol pass you by, then shoot the third or fourth man. Here again, laid down drills will dictate which member of your patrol will spring the ambush. Remember that in the heat of battle, particularly with today's automatic weapons, the tendency is to fire high, often missing the target altogether. Aim low and shoot to kill. — Bob Carss

Rassam Quotes By Frederick Lenz

I'm only here for a while, so I'd like to do what I can. — Frederick Lenz

Rassam Quotes By Sigmar Polke

We were very poor and my family lost everything during the war - our home and our identity. But I'm a believer in luck and think the social conditions you're born into provide the opportunity for you to prove your luck. And I suppose I've been lucky. — Sigmar Polke

Rassam Quotes By Kurt Tucholsky

Language is a weapon, keep it honed! — Kurt Tucholsky

Rassam Quotes By Lena Dunham

I always reminded myself that this wasn't exactly where I was meant to be, but pit stops are okay on the road of life, aren't they? — Lena Dunham

Rassam Quotes By George Stephen Goodspeed

Among the clay tablets brought back by Rassam from Ashurbanipal's library, were fragments of the Babylonian story of the Deluge. These, as translated by George Smith, aroused immense interest, which led to the desire that search be made for the missing fragments. The explorers of the Heroic Period had uncovered palaces, bas-reliefs, and statues, but had given the insignificant tablets secondary consideration. From the library chamber of Ashurbanipal's palace Rassam had extracted only those tablets which could be conveniently reached. With the power to read attained meanwhile, the tablets had become fully as important as the sculptures, if not more so. George Smith's expedition indicated, therefore, that the Modern Scientific Period of excavation had begun. Its end is not yet in sight, since its goal is the investigation of all feasible localities in the Mesopotamian valley, with the purpose of throwing all available light upon the history and life of these ancient peoples. — George Stephen Goodspeed