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"A lie can travel halfway round the world while the truth is putting on its shoes."
By Mark Twain
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"A celibate clergy is an especially good idea, because it tends to suppress any hereditary propensity toward fanaticism."
By Carl Sagan, "Contact"
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"A good name, like good will, is got by many actions and lost by one."
By Lord Jeffery
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"A sympathetic Scot summed it all up very neatly in the remark, "You should make a point of trying every experience once, excepting incest and folk dancing.""
By Sir Arnold Bax
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"Aim at the sun, and you may not reach it; but your arrow will fly far higher than if aimed at an object on a level with yourself."
By Joel Hawes
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"All last year we tried to teach him English, and the only word he learned was million."
By Tommy Lasorda, on pitcher Fernando Valenzuela
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"A technique succeeds in mathematical physics, not by a clever trick, or a happy accident, but because it expresses some aspect of a physical truth."
By O.G. Sutton
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"A thing can be true and still be desperate folly."
By Richard Adams, _Watership Down_
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"A cap of good acid costs five dollars and for that you can hear the Universal Symphony with God singing solo and the Holy Ghost on drums."
By Hunter S. Thompson
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"A man is too apt to forget that in this world he cannot have everything. A choice is all that is left him."
By H. Mathews
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"Any fool can tell the truth, but it requires a man of some sense to know how to lie well."
By Samuel Butler
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"A little learning is a dangerous thing but a lot of ignorance is just as bad."
By Bob Edwards
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"And what is a good citizen? Simply one who never says, does or thinks anything that is unusual. Schools are maintained in order to bring this uniformity up to the highest possible point. A school is a hopper into which children are heaved while they are still young and tender; therein they are pressed into certain standard shapes and covered from head to heels with official rubber-stamps."
By H. L. Mencken
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"A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic."
By Joseph Stalin
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"A politician will always tip off his true belief by stating the opposite at the beginning of the sentence. For maximum comprehension, do not start listening until the first clause is concluded. Begin instead at the word "but" which begins the second, or active, clause. This is the way to tell a liberal from a conservative -- before they tell you.
Thus: "I have always believed in a strong national defense, second to none, but ... " (a liberal, about to propose a $20 billion defense cut)."
By Frank Mankiewicz
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"And, of course, you have the commercials where savvy businesspeople Get Ahead by using their MacIntosh computers to create the ultimate American business product: a really sharp-looking report."
By Dave Barry
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"Artificial Intelligence: the art of making computers that behave like the ones in movies"
By Bill Bulko
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"All programmers are playwrights and all computers are lousy actors."
By Unknown
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"An apprentice carpenter may want only a hammer and saw, but a master craftsman employs many precision tools. Computer programming likewise requires sophisticated tools to cope with the complexity of real applications, and only practice with these tools will build skill in their use."
By Robert L. Kruse, Data Structures and Program Design
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"Any sufficiently advanced bug is indistinguishable from a feature."
By Kulawiec
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