
Top 15 Olza Logo Quotes
#2. If you want to get one hour of good painting in, you have to have four hours of uninterrupted time.
David Lynch
#3. I'm a conservative. I believe in the idea of freedom and liberty, but more importantly, look at my voting background. I voted against bailing out Wall Street. I voted against, never voted for, a tax increase.
Kevin McCarthy
#4. Death is healing, it tells us to forgive, it reminds us that we don't want to die alone.
Lucia Berlin
#5. In general, lives seem to veer abruptly from one thing to another, to jostle and bump, to squirm. A person heads in one direction, turns sharply in mid-course, stalls, drifts, starts up again. Nothing is ever known, and inevitably we come to a place quite different from the one we set out for.
Paul Auster
#6. We cannot control what others choose to do, and so we cannot force our children to heaven, but we can determine what we will do. And we can decide that we will do all we can to bring down the powers of heaven into that family we want so much to have forever.
Henry B. Eyring
#7. It has amazed me that the most incongruous traits should exist in the same person and, for all that, yield a plausible harmony.
W. Somerset Maugham
#8. The person viewing your work has no idea what the scene really looked like, nor do they care ...
Mike Svob
#9. On the birth of his son after having had two daughters: I finally got it right.
Jack Nicholson
#10. The truth of a theory is in your mind, not in your eyes.
Albert Einstein
#12. I believe transparency in government is key to restoring our nation's faith in its elected leaders.
Kirsten Gillibrand
#13. You just have to let yourself go and not be worried about what other people are going to say or the things that might come out ... Just jump right in full force and be as silly and stupid and adolescent and introspective as you want to be.
Amy Ray
#14. As Americans, we have traditionally been the optimists sporting the 'can-do' attitude. But when it comes to addressing climate adaptation and resiliency, we seem to be more 'can't do' than 'can-do.'
Paul Tonko
#15. Woodrow Wilson, like most other educated Americans of his time, despised mathematics, complaining that "the natural man inevitably rebels against mathematics, a mild form of torture that could only be leaned by painful process of drill.
Sylvia Nasar
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