Top 15 Mirage Anniversary Quotes
#1. I'd be happy if people said that I did a little bit to raise the dignity and recognition of the greatness of African-American music.
Ahmet Ertegun
#2. If misery loves company, then triumph demands an audience.
Brian Moore
#3. Regulators have not been able to achieve the level of future clarity required to act pre-emptively. The problem is not lack of regulation but unrealistic expectations. What we confront in reality is uncertainty, some of it frighteningly so ...
Alan Greenspan
#4. No book is of much importance; the vital thing is, What do you yourself think?
Elbert Hubbard
#5. She'd loved and she'd lost and as she lay in the bed of a man who didn't love her any more than she loved him, she would have sold her soul to not have done either. "Faye?
Tiffany Reisz
#6. I've spent my whole life learning how to do things that were hard for me.
Sonia Sotomayor
#7. Let us do whatever is required to qualify for the Holy Ghost as our companion and then let us go forward fearlessly so that we will be given the powers to do whatever the Lord calls us to do.
Henry B. Eyring
#9. from our dinner guests. I almost blanched just thinking the word guest.
Melissa Haag
#10. I think people are hungry for someone who will stand up on principle.
Rand Paul
#11. Indecisive? Uncertain? Worried? Let the rolling ivory tumble your burdens away. $2.50 per pair.
Luke Rhinehart
#12. The soul and heart are intertwined like the vine is to the oak.
Emilie Petersen
#13. It's funny because everyone says, 'Oh you're reclusive; you don't do social media,' but it's not about being reclusive. I like direct contact, and I like contact that's purposeful.
Banks
#14. For the best building and planting ... the architect and gardener must have some knowledge of each other's business, and each must regard with feelings of kindly reverence the unknown domains of the other's higher knowledge.
Gertrude Jekyll
#15. Always remember that we were innocent and could not wrong our conscience. -- Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, in their last letter to their sons, June 19, 1953.
Jillian Cantor