In Israel, there's a lot to learn from anyone, because to live there you've got to deal with the truth. Things happen real fast. Your day goes from cool to catastrophic in one second. Israelis know that the cafe you're in could blow up, or the shopping mall, and they rock that.
‐‐ Henry Rollins
In Israel, waves of anger and fear circulate all the time, but so do jokes and gossip and silky evening breezes. So, too, in America.
‐‐ P. J. O'Rourke
In Israel, we are sorry for the loss of life of Turkish citizens in May 2010, when Israel confronted a provocative flotilla of ships bound for Gaza. I am sure that the proper way to express these sentiments to the Turkish government and the Turkish people can be found.
‐‐ Ehud Olmert
In Israel we tend to be carried away by our emotions.
‐‐ Ehud Olmert
In it not easy to remain rational and normal mentally in such a setting where, even in our airport in Montgomery, there is a white waiting room... There are restroom facilities for white ladies and colored women, white men and colored men. We stand outside after being served at the same ticket counter instead of sitting on the inside.
‐‐ Rosa Parks
In Italian there is an expression: We don't sleep on the fame.
‐‐ Donatella Versace
In Italy, everybody buys silver for every special occasion. Baptisms, weddings, you get silver.
‐‐ Debi Mazar
In Italy, food is an expression of love. It is how you show those around you that you care for them. Having a love for food means you also have a love for those you are preparing it for and for yourself.
‐‐ Joe Bastianich
In Italy, for 30 years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love, they had 500 years of democracy and peace - and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.
‐‐ Graham Greene
In Italy, I had an Afro, and a lot of the kids came up and felt my hair. It really was funny. I wish I had understood Italian.
‐‐ Sugar Ray Leonard
In Italy, it is difficult to see a film in the original language because the voice actors here are a mafia.
‐‐ Vincent Cassel
In Italy it's full-on stardom when you're a cyclist - eating in restaurants for free, it's great.
‐‐ David Millar
In Italy, on the breaking up of the Roman Empire, society might be said to be resolved into its original elements, - into hostile atoms, whose only movement was that of mutual repulsion.
‐‐ Edward Everett
In Italy the artist is a god. Now if the artist is a god, the scientist is likewise a god.
‐‐ Josef Albers
In Italy the censor is very old and there are many judges and psychiatrists who analyse you.
‐‐ Dario Argento
In Italy, the country where fascism was born, we have a particular relation with the Holocaust, but as a turning point in history it belongs to everybody in the world. It is a part of humanity.
‐‐ Roberto Benigni
In Italy, the Milanese are well organized but follow bourgeois taste. They adhere to certain codes of elegance, but not to individualism.
‐‐ Christian Lacroix
In Italy, there are a lot of Coppolas - it's like being called Jones. No one really notices.
‐‐ Gia Coppola
In Italy, there are so many significant architectural structures in history such as the Pantheon in Rome, or the Duomo.
‐‐ Tadao Ando
In Italy there's perhaps a little less space than in Spain, but there's certainly as much sunshine.
‐‐ Carlo Rubbia
In Italy, they add work and life on to food and wine.
‐‐ Robin Leach
In Italy they take cheap cloth and make it look expensive, but I take expensive cloth and make it look cheap. They just don't understand.
‐‐ Vivienne Westwood
In Italy, where I live now, I have put some distance between myself and the world that has formed me.
‐‐ Jhumpa Lahiri
In its attempt to crush the Black Panthers, the FBI engineered frequent arrests on the flimsiest of pretexts.
‐‐ Alexander Cockburn
In its beginnings, music was merely chamber music, meant to be listened to in a small space by a small audience.
‐‐ Gustav Mahler
In its best prewar year, Europe with almost 300 million people had a gross national product of 150 billion dollars. In that same year, the United States with 150 million people had a gross national product of 300 billion dollars.
‐‐ Paul Hoffman
In its brief 14-episode run, 'Firefly' gave viewers as much chance of witnessing a horseback chase or train robbery as a laser gun and spacefight in any given episode. Snappy one-liners and silly hats were a constant, of course.
‐‐ Jay Kristoff
In its conception the literature prize belongs to days when a writer could still be thought of as, by virtue of his or her occupation, a sage, someone with no institutional affiliations who could offer an authoritative word on our times as well as on our moral life.
‐‐ J. M. Coetzee
In its current form, globalization cannot be sustained. Democratic societies will not support it. Authoritarian leaders will fear to impose it.
‐‐ John Sweeney
In its early stages, insomnia is almost an oasis in which those who have to think or suffer darkly take refuge.
‐‐ Sidonie Gabrielle Colette
In its entirety, probably, it follows us at every instant; all that we have felt, thought and willed from our earliest infancy is there, leaning over the present which is about to join it, pressing against the portals of consciousness that would fain leave it outside.
‐‐ Henri Bergson
In its exterior relations - abroad - this government is the sole and exclusive representative of the united majesty, sovereignty, and power of the States, constituting this great and glorious Union. To the rest of the world, we are one. Neither State nor State government is known beyond our borders. Within, it is different.
‐‐ John C. Calhoun
In its famous paradox, the equation of money and excrement, psychoanalysis becomes the first science to state what common sense and the poets have long known - that the essence of money is in its absolute worthlessness.
‐‐ Norman O. Brown
In its fifty-first year of publication, 'The Paris Review' continues to search for new ways to bring together writers and readers.
‐‐ John D'Agata
In its first 30 years of existence, up to the mid 1970s, the practical applications of game theory were very limited, probably as a result of excessive preoccupation by game theorists with cooperative solution concepts.
‐‐ John Harsanyi
In its function, the power to punish is not essentially different from that of curing or educating.
‐‐ Michel Foucault
In its haste to bolster nationalism, in its obsession with security, Europe is losing its soul.
‐‐ Tariq Ramadan
In its heyday, the blazer had come to symbolise a kind of conventional decency. Yacht club commodores and school bursars wore blazers. People who played bowls wore blazers.
‐‐ Craig Brown
In its heyday, the car was an expression of technical flair and design genius: the original Mini, the Beetle, the 2CV, and the Fiat 500 were all, in their various ways, inspired incarnations of functionality.
‐‐ Martin Jacques
In its history, Europe has committed so many massacres and horrors that it should bow its own head in shame.
‐‐ Desmond Tutu
In its lowest, most common form, inspiration is simple charisma that becomes magnified by the media, as with Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton.
‐‐ George Packer
In its most limited sense, modern, art would seem to concern itself only with the technical innovations of the period.
‐‐ Edward Hopper
In its original version, the FTAA was meant to be a special carve-out for Washington and Wall Street as global 'free trade' advanced under the umbrella of the Doha round of the WTO.
‐‐ Greg Grandin
In its report, the Cox Committee concludes that China is using stolen U.S. design information to speed up its deployment of a new nuclear missile force.
‐‐ Charles Bass
In its truest manifestation, where it gives judgments, poetry is super-luxury. It would be interesting to see what would happen to a High Court judge if he were forced to follow the true poetic formula, doing the job for love, being forced into pubs for relief.
‐‐ Patrick Kavanagh
In its worse forms, conservatism is a matter of 'I hate strangers and anything that's different.'
‐‐ P. J. O'Rourke
In itself and in its consequences the life of leisure is beautiful and ennobling in all civilised men's eyes.
‐‐ Thorstein Veblen
In itself, homosexuality is as limiting as heterosexuality: the ideal should be to be capable of loving a woman or a man; either, a human being, without feeling fear, restraint, or obligation.
‐‐ Simone de Beauvoir
In jail I was just like everybody else, I was sitting there praying, feeling caged.
‐‐ Dennis Rodman