Can anyone find a quotation that is related to philosophy?
Q. Hey Yahoo community! Can anyone find a quotation that is related to philosophy or in other words a quote by a philosopher. And why is this quotation so meaningful or important to you, by applying to life. You don't have to be too personal if you don't want to. Thanks in advance. Also please state the name of the person who said the quote.
Asked by lilbounce88 : ) nb - Thu Jan 7 15:26:16 2010 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. OMG! "Can anyone find a quotation that is related to philosophy?" Who CAN NOT find one? Everything is philosophy is quotable--by someone--as being meaningful. He who does not know what the world is, does not know where he is. And he who does not know for what purpose the world exists, does not know who he is, nor what the world is. But he who has failed in any one of these things could not even say for what purpose he exists himself. What then dost thou think of him who avoids or seeks the praise of those who applaud, of men who know not either where they are or who they are? "So you think that money is the root of all evil?" said Francisco d'Anconia. "Have you ever asked what is the root of money? "From each according to his… [cont.]
Answered by Ardi Pithecus - Thu Jan 7 16:12:16 2010
Q. Hey Yahoo community! Can anyone find a quotation that is related to philosophy or in other words a quote by a philosopher. And why is this quotation so meaningful or important to you, by applying to life. You don't have to be too personal if you don't want to. Thanks in advance. Also please state the name of the person who said the quote.
Asked by lilbounce88 : ) nb - Thu Jan 7 15:26:16 2010 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. OMG! "Can anyone find a quotation that is related to philosophy?" Who CAN NOT find one? Everything is philosophy is quotable--by someone--as being meaningful. He who does not know what the world is, does not know where he is. And he who does not know for what purpose the world exists, does not know who he is, nor what the world is. But he who has failed in any one of these things could not even say for what purpose he exists himself. What then dost thou think of him who avoids or seeks the praise of those who applaud, of men who know not either where they are or who they are? "So you think that money is the root of all evil?" said Francisco d'Anconia. "Have you ever asked what is the root of money? "From each according to his… [cont.]
Answered by Ardi Pithecus - Thu Jan 7 16:12:16 2010
How are quotation marks supposed to be used?
Q. For example, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used?" In this example should the question mark be where it is or come after the quotation mark? Like this, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used"?
Asked by . - Wed Nov 11 06:52:36 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. In this case, the question mark goes inside the quotation marks. Here are other things to think about regarding quotation marks. The placement of question marks with quotes follows logic. If a question is in quotation marks, the question mark should be placed inside the quotation marks. Examples: She asked, "Will you still be my friend?" Do you agree with the saying, "All's fair in love and war"? Here the question is outside the quote. NOTE: Only one ending punctuation mark is used with quotation marks. Also, the stronger punctuation mark wins. Therefore, no period after war is used. Also, when you have a question outside quoted material AND inside quoted material, use only one question mark and place it inside the … [cont.]
Answered by momomo - Wed Nov 11 07:02:28 2009
Q. For example, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used?" In this example should the question mark be where it is or come after the quotation mark? Like this, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used"?
Asked by . - Wed Nov 11 06:52:36 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. In this case, the question mark goes inside the quotation marks. Here are other things to think about regarding quotation marks. The placement of question marks with quotes follows logic. If a question is in quotation marks, the question mark should be placed inside the quotation marks. Examples: She asked, "Will you still be my friend?" Do you agree with the saying, "All's fair in love and war"? Here the question is outside the quote. NOTE: Only one ending punctuation mark is used with quotation marks. Also, the stronger punctuation mark wins. Therefore, no period after war is used. Also, when you have a question outside quoted material AND inside quoted material, use only one question mark and place it inside the … [cont.]
Answered by momomo - Wed Nov 11 07:02:28 2009
What is the quotation about souls and soles at the Holocaust exhibit with the pile of shoes?
Q. There is one exhibit at the Holocaust Museum in DC that has piles of shoes on both sides. I really need the exact quotation about soles or souls because I want to write an essay about it. Please help!
Asked by abc - Thu Dec 25 20:50:56 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Is this the one you mean? "We are the shoes, we are the last witnesses. We are shoes from grandchildren and grandfathers, From Prague, Paris and Amsterdam, And because we are only made of fabric and leather And not of blood and flesh, each one of us avoided the hellfire."
Answered by Wolf Heart - Fri Dec 26 12:54:54 2008
Q. There is one exhibit at the Holocaust Museum in DC that has piles of shoes on both sides. I really need the exact quotation about soles or souls because I want to write an essay about it. Please help!
Asked by abc - Thu Dec 25 20:50:56 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Is this the one you mean? "We are the shoes, we are the last witnesses. We are shoes from grandchildren and grandfathers, From Prague, Paris and Amsterdam, And because we are only made of fabric and leather And not of blood and flesh, each one of us avoided the hellfire."
Answered by Wolf Heart - Fri Dec 26 12:54:54 2008
Where can I find a good quotation about being a man for others or helping others as an achievement?
Q. It's for an essay. I want to start and end my essay with a quotation.
Asked by Essaygirl - Sun Jul 6 07:54:09 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. If I am not for myself, for whom shall I be? If I am only for myself, what am I? --Akiva
Answered by LucaPacioli1492 - Sun Jul 6 16:01:00 2008
Q. It's for an essay. I want to start and end my essay with a quotation.
Asked by Essaygirl - Sun Jul 6 07:54:09 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. If I am not for myself, for whom shall I be? If I am only for myself, what am I? --Akiva
Answered by LucaPacioli1492 - Sun Jul 6 16:01:00 2008
How do I embed quotation marks before a comma?
Q. It is a science with which I could truly follow along no if you say so, whatever, or blindly memorizing formulas. Do the quotation marks go before or after the comma? And if I wanted to make "if you say so" and "whatever" plural, how would I do it? Thanks!
Asked by beryl3000 - Sat Jan 31 12:49:48 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The commas go inside the quotation marks, just as you have them ... that is the style in America. (If you were writing in British style, you would use single quotation marks and put the commas outside them: --no 'if you say so', 'whatever', or blindly ...) To make them plural: --no "if you say so's," "whatevers," or blindly ..., etc. Notice, I've used an apostrophe in "so's" but not in "whatevers." It was necessary in "so's" for clarity, otherwise the reader would have wondered what "sos" meant ... but it wasn't needed in "whatevers," because the meaning is clear there. It might be hard to find authority for this use of an apostrophe, but it seems to me only common sense.
Answered by waynea - Sat Jan 31 21:20:31 2009
Q. It is a science with which I could truly follow along no if you say so, whatever, or blindly memorizing formulas. Do the quotation marks go before or after the comma? And if I wanted to make "if you say so" and "whatever" plural, how would I do it? Thanks!
Asked by beryl3000 - Sat Jan 31 12:49:48 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The commas go inside the quotation marks, just as you have them ... that is the style in America. (If you were writing in British style, you would use single quotation marks and put the commas outside them: --no 'if you say so', 'whatever', or blindly ...) To make them plural: --no "if you say so's," "whatevers," or blindly ..., etc. Notice, I've used an apostrophe in "so's" but not in "whatevers." It was necessary in "so's" for clarity, otherwise the reader would have wondered what "sos" meant ... but it wasn't needed in "whatevers," because the meaning is clear there. It might be hard to find authority for this use of an apostrophe, but it seems to me only common sense.
Answered by waynea - Sat Jan 31 21:20:31 2009
What is the best way to render a visually stunning quotation on the computer?
Q. I basically need to make a quotation look cool using formatting on the computer. I'm not a drawer, so unless it's really easy, like a heart, I will not be able to do it. I'm using a Mac, so all the apps (Word, Pages, Comic Life, Keynote, etc) are on here. Any advice? And it must be on a creative background. And it must be on a creative background.
Asked by grief - Wed Dec 3 17:41:49 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Might be a good starting point. I used it for posting bulletins & what not. It saves in .jpg format I believe.
Answered by Moenae L sae V toe - Wed Dec 3 18:16:54 2008
Q. I basically need to make a quotation look cool using formatting on the computer. I'm not a drawer, so unless it's really easy, like a heart, I will not be able to do it. I'm using a Mac, so all the apps (Word, Pages, Comic Life, Keynote, etc) are on here. Any advice? And it must be on a creative background. And it must be on a creative background.
Asked by grief - Wed Dec 3 17:41:49 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Might be a good starting point. I used it for posting bulletins & what not. It saves in .jpg format I believe.
Answered by Moenae L sae V toe - Wed Dec 3 18:16:54 2008
How do you write a quotation inside of another quotation?
Q. 1. What symbol would you use to write the inside-quotation mark? 2. How would the capitalization work? 3. How would the punctuation work? I'm quoting a quote from the Great Gatsby. Is this how you would write it out: My house looks well, doesn t it? he demanded. See how the whole front of it catches the light. If the font made it hard to tell, I used apostrophes to designate the inside-quotation. Thanks in advanced :-)
Asked by BWson - Sun Jan 10 13:13:00 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I don't know what circumstance would require you to write ONLY a quotation inside another quotation (as in your example), but if such a circumstance were to occur, that is exactly what (American-style) punctuation you'd use except for the spaces either side of the outer quote-marks. For instance: In discussing Gatsby's great need for the esteem of his wealthy neighbors, Simpson refers to "his childish attempt to impress Daisy, stating pathetically, 'My house looks well, doesn't it?' he demanded. 'See how the whole front of it catches the light.'"
Answered by Barbara - Sun Jan 10 13:39:05 2010
Q. 1. What symbol would you use to write the inside-quotation mark? 2. How would the capitalization work? 3. How would the punctuation work? I'm quoting a quote from the Great Gatsby. Is this how you would write it out: My house looks well, doesn t it? he demanded. See how the whole front of it catches the light. If the font made it hard to tell, I used apostrophes to designate the inside-quotation. Thanks in advanced :-)
Asked by BWson - Sun Jan 10 13:13:00 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I don't know what circumstance would require you to write ONLY a quotation inside another quotation (as in your example), but if such a circumstance were to occur, that is exactly what (American-style) punctuation you'd use except for the spaces either side of the outer quote-marks. For instance: In discussing Gatsby's great need for the esteem of his wealthy neighbors, Simpson refers to "his childish attempt to impress Daisy, stating pathetically, 'My house looks well, doesn't it?' he demanded. 'See how the whole front of it catches the light.'"
Answered by Barbara - Sun Jan 10 13:39:05 2010
How do I draft a quotation for the items I am selling?
Q. I am selling phones and I cannot provide my clients with a professional quotation.Please help.
Asked by JOE - Mon Jul 28 09:57:48 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. A quote is a simple document. It gives your company name and contact information, the customer's name, contact information and a contact, the specific name of the product (with model number), the quoted price, the length of time the offer is good, and your signature.
Answered by tincoatr - Mon Jul 28 10:05:42 2008
Q. I am selling phones and I cannot provide my clients with a professional quotation.Please help.
Asked by JOE - Mon Jul 28 09:57:48 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. A quote is a simple document. It gives your company name and contact information, the customer's name, contact information and a contact, the specific name of the product (with model number), the quoted price, the length of time the offer is good, and your signature.
Answered by tincoatr - Mon Jul 28 10:05:42 2008
What does this quotation mean "There is no good or evil insofar as it influences the mind"?
Q. This is a quotation by Spinoza and I'm completely in love with it. I know what it means, but I want to make sure that I understood it correctly.
Asked by Arya - Mon Mar 30 17:09:24 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. "It is not the action that is good or evil. it is your judgment of the action that makes it so." evil only exists because we define it as such. it is the mind that makes the things we see evil, not the particular action itself.
Answered by Maestrotx ( ) - Mon Mar 30 17:16:57 2009
Q. This is a quotation by Spinoza and I'm completely in love with it. I know what it means, but I want to make sure that I understood it correctly.
Asked by Arya - Mon Mar 30 17:09:24 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. "It is not the action that is good or evil. it is your judgment of the action that makes it so." evil only exists because we define it as such. it is the mind that makes the things we see evil, not the particular action itself.
Answered by Maestrotx ( ) - Mon Mar 30 17:16:57 2009
Is there a code to hide the Myspace headline quotation marks?
Q. I have tried some codes that still left one quotation mark.
Asked by Porcelain Doll - Sat Oct 4 03:45:51 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. use this but you have to have an image in your headline for it to work
Answered by the punk - Sat Oct 4 08:34:51 2008
Q. I have tried some codes that still left one quotation mark.
Asked by Porcelain Doll - Sat Oct 4 03:45:51 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. use this but you have to have an image in your headline for it to work
Answered by the punk - Sat Oct 4 08:34:51 2008
Why do restaurants put quotation marks in menus?
Q. Some items read like: Salad with "gorgonzola" and mushrooms T-bone with shaved "truffles" Why do they randomly throw quotation marks into their descriptions? It seems to be a fancy restaurant thing.
Asked by . - Sun Dec 27 21:00:57 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Restaurant owners are not necessarily the best educated people in the working environment. Punctuation may not be as important to them as knowing about the food served. I do not have any quotation marks on the menu at my restaurant. I am thankful for the folks that checked them before they were printed. It's not fun being stuck between floors on the elevator of intellect. :-)
Answered by Dave - Sun Dec 27 21:23:29 2009
Q. Some items read like: Salad with "gorgonzola" and mushrooms T-bone with shaved "truffles" Why do they randomly throw quotation marks into their descriptions? It seems to be a fancy restaurant thing.
Asked by . - Sun Dec 27 21:00:57 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Restaurant owners are not necessarily the best educated people in the working environment. Punctuation may not be as important to them as knowing about the food served. I do not have any quotation marks on the menu at my restaurant. I am thankful for the folks that checked them before they were printed. It's not fun being stuck between floors on the elevator of intellect. :-)
Answered by Dave - Sun Dec 27 21:23:29 2009
What is that hand movement called when they put there fingers like quotation marks?
Q. Like when they are being sarcastic or something, and they do the thing with there fingers like So how does your "girl friend" feel ... The quotation marks stand for the hand/finger movement, as if to be implying that the girl friend does not exist
Asked by [EnglishExpress] - Mon Oct 15 15:29:54 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. air quotes
Answered by Anomalous - Mon Oct 15 15:32:19 2007
Q. Like when they are being sarcastic or something, and they do the thing with there fingers like So how does your "girl friend" feel ... The quotation marks stand for the hand/finger movement, as if to be implying that the girl friend does not exist
Asked by [EnglishExpress] - Mon Oct 15 15:29:54 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. air quotes
Answered by Anomalous - Mon Oct 15 15:32:19 2007
how are quotation marks supposed to be used?
Q. For example, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used?" In this example should the question mark be where it is or come after the quotation mark? Like this, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used"?
Asked by . - Wed Nov 11 06:33:37 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. the first one. the punctuation is always supposed to be inside the quotations
Answered by cap ou pas cap? - Wed Nov 11 09:21:57 2009
Q. For example, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used?" In this example should the question mark be where it is or come after the quotation mark? Like this, "How are quotation marks supposed to be used"?
Asked by . - Wed Nov 11 06:33:37 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. the first one. the punctuation is always supposed to be inside the quotations
Answered by cap ou pas cap? - Wed Nov 11 09:21:57 2009
What are some good stock quotation systems i might be able to modify (open source or components)?
Q. Primarily what I am trying to do is see if I can develop a system similar to Ameritrade. I am open to an open source solution. I would like to create an alternative stock quotation system and test my programming skills is what I am mainly trying to achieve.
Asked by bemas5 - Mon Dec 8 18:59:55 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Try www.sourceforge.net
Answered by Dinesh Chandra - Wed Dec 10 05:29:03 2008
Q. Primarily what I am trying to do is see if I can develop a system similar to Ameritrade. I am open to an open source solution. I would like to create an alternative stock quotation system and test my programming skills is what I am mainly trying to achieve.
Asked by bemas5 - Mon Dec 8 18:59:55 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Try www.sourceforge.net
Answered by Dinesh Chandra - Wed Dec 10 05:29:03 2008
Is it necessary to add quotation marks to the title of a book?
Q. Should I be adding quotation marks to the title of a book if I am refering to it in my essay.
Asked by jakkob04 - Mon Mar 31 21:23:03 2008 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. No, quotations are used for short stories and poems. When using a book title, you generally italicize (when typing) or underline (when either handwriting or typing.)
Answered by <3 my Marine - Mon Mar 31 22:24:28 2008
Q. Should I be adding quotation marks to the title of a book if I am refering to it in my essay.
Asked by jakkob04 - Mon Mar 31 21:23:03 2008 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. No, quotations are used for short stories and poems. When using a book title, you generally italicize (when typing) or underline (when either handwriting or typing.)
Answered by <3 my Marine - Mon Mar 31 22:24:28 2008
Is it correct to italicize a phrase and enclose it in quotation marks at the same time?
Q. If I'm writing an essay in English and I insert a Latin term into one of the paragraphs, I have to italicize it (because it's not English) and I also have to enclose it in quotation marks (because it's the title of a work of art). I also have another phrase, which is of another language again, but this time, it's the name of a group of artists. Is it acceptable to italicize both terms and enclose them in quotation marks as well? Thank you so much.
Asked by Sura Brandt - Sat Feb 13 00:23:33 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. If I'm writing an essay in English and I insert a Latin term into one of the paragraphs, I have to italicize it (because it's not English) and I also have to enclose it in quotation marks (because it's the title of a work of art). I also have another phrase, which is of another language again, but this time, it's the name of a group of artists. Is it acceptable to italicize both terms and enclose them in quotation marks as well? Thank you so much.
Asked by Sura Brandt - Sat Feb 13 00:23:33 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Do you use quotation marks when writing a thought?
Q. If you are writing a story, and expressing a thought inside of a character's mind, do you use quotation marks?
Asked by Andrew D - Sun Feb 10 20:27:52 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. no you dont.
Answered by NickJonasLover96 - Sun Feb 10 20:33:28 2008
Q. If you are writing a story, and expressing a thought inside of a character's mind, do you use quotation marks?
Asked by Andrew D - Sun Feb 10 20:27:52 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. no you dont.
Answered by NickJonasLover96 - Sun Feb 10 20:33:28 2008
in a quotation, why does the first letter sometimes appear between square brackets?
Q. and why are there sometimes ellipses before the start of the quotation. surely it can't mean there's missing text because if so, there should be ellipses before and after the quotation?
Asked by nicevideoshameaaboutthesong - Tue Sep 29 08:09:17 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The letter within those brackets may have been in a different case in the original...another answer quoted "We hold these truths to be self-evident...", but suppose that line had been part of a longer line with the 'we' not being the first word. Thus, "[W]e hold these truths..." The writer using the quoted material conforms the quote to his/her own text, making bracketed alterations as needed for clarity...as in the example shown above supplying a person's name.
Answered by constantreader - Tue Sep 29 08:28:29 2009
Q. and why are there sometimes ellipses before the start of the quotation. surely it can't mean there's missing text because if so, there should be ellipses before and after the quotation?
Asked by nicevideoshameaaboutthesong - Tue Sep 29 08:09:17 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The letter within those brackets may have been in a different case in the original...another answer quoted "We hold these truths to be self-evident...", but suppose that line had been part of a longer line with the 'we' not being the first word. Thus, "[W]e hold these truths..." The writer using the quoted material conforms the quote to his/her own text, making bracketed alterations as needed for clarity...as in the example shown above supplying a person's name.
Answered by constantreader - Tue Sep 29 08:28:29 2009
Why do YA users use an asterisk in place of a quotation mark?
Q. I've noticed a lot of users on Y!A use an asterisk in place of quotation marks when the word they're using has a slightly different meaning than its literal meaning. Or sometimes it seems like they're using it for emphasis, like you'd use bold print or capitals. Is this gaining popularity in casual writing? I've never seen it used this way before.
Asked by . alias . - Sat Apr 25 12:55:52 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Often on sites that don't have formatting tags, asterisks are used for bold, slashes for italic, and underscores for underline. Like this: *bold* /italic/ _underline_ Not too sure where this originated from (Usenet perhaps?), but it's been used for a long time. It's not only used here on Yahoo Answers
Answered by Daniel15 - Sat Apr 25 13:04:36 2009
Q. I've noticed a lot of users on Y!A use an asterisk in place of quotation marks when the word they're using has a slightly different meaning than its literal meaning. Or sometimes it seems like they're using it for emphasis, like you'd use bold print or capitals. Is this gaining popularity in casual writing? I've never seen it used this way before.
Asked by . alias . - Sat Apr 25 12:55:52 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Often on sites that don't have formatting tags, asterisks are used for bold, slashes for italic, and underscores for underline. Like this: *bold* /italic/ _underline_ Not too sure where this originated from (Usenet perhaps?), but it's been used for a long time. It's not only used here on Yahoo Answers
Answered by Daniel15 - Sat Apr 25 13:04:36 2009
Quotation about "civilization being only 24 hours and two meals away from barbarism"?
Q. There's a quotation about "civilization being only 24 hours and two meals away from barbarism". (I may have the number of hours and meals wrong) Where does the saying come from? I think I first came across it in a Terry Pratchett novel, but I found a web reference (which I've now lost) attributing it to a Larry Niven novel published in the 70s. I have a feeling it's even older, though.
Asked by KS - Mon Nov 19 05:09:43 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. KS -- I have searched every known quotation source on the Internet, plus several old-fashioned books in my own library, and I am unable to locate the source of this quote. It sounds like something American humorists Mark Twain, H.L. Mencken or Will Rogers might have said, but these specialized sources of quotations also turned up nothing. There are slightly differing phrasings of it mentioned in web searches. I myself have read and heard this statement, and variations on it, in articles, speeches and conversations. But as I think about it, I do not recall anyone ever writing or saying, "As So-and-So said, 'Civilization...etc.'" It's usually introduced as "It's been said that..." or "Someone once said that..." or other similar… [cont.]
Answered by JMH - Mon Nov 19 07:57:44 2007
Q. There's a quotation about "civilization being only 24 hours and two meals away from barbarism". (I may have the number of hours and meals wrong) Where does the saying come from? I think I first came across it in a Terry Pratchett novel, but I found a web reference (which I've now lost) attributing it to a Larry Niven novel published in the 70s. I have a feeling it's even older, though.
Asked by KS - Mon Nov 19 05:09:43 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. KS -- I have searched every known quotation source on the Internet, plus several old-fashioned books in my own library, and I am unable to locate the source of this quote. It sounds like something American humorists Mark Twain, H.L. Mencken or Will Rogers might have said, but these specialized sources of quotations also turned up nothing. There are slightly differing phrasings of it mentioned in web searches. I myself have read and heard this statement, and variations on it, in articles, speeches and conversations. But as I think about it, I do not recall anyone ever writing or saying, "As So-and-So said, 'Civilization...etc.'" It's usually introduced as "It's been said that..." or "Someone once said that..." or other similar… [cont.]
Answered by JMH - Mon Nov 19 07:57:44 2007
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'quotation'
Tue Feb 16 12:58:38 2010 [ refresh local cache ]
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Be glad you don't live in Tulsa, which lays off 155 cops on Friday
Kansas City Star
Mayor Dewey Bartlett's strong quotation on the matter: "The people of Tulsa were let down tonight by the very people they hired and trained to protect them. ...
and more »
Kansas City Star
Mayor Dewey Bartlett's strong quotation on the matter: "The people of Tulsa were let down tonight by the very people they hired and trained to protect them. ...
and more »
Synthetic Cryolite with Lowest Latest Quotation of China
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Synthetic Cryolite with Lowest Latest Quotation of China
614px x 819px | 62.60kB
[source page]
Synthetic Cryolite with Lowest Latest Quotation of China
Quotation of the Day: Quotation of the day for February 16, 2010
Quotation of the Day editor
ue, 16 Feb 2010 05:10:00 GM
Quotation. of the Day for February 16, 2010. "Even more consequential, though, is the fast-growing swath of voters who can summon no affinity for either party. As in other aspects of modern American life, brand allegiance in politics is ...
Quotation of the Day editor
ue, 16 Feb 2010 05:10:00 GM
Quotation. of the Day for February 16, 2010. "Even more consequential, though, is the fast-growing swath of voters who can summon no affinity for either party. As in other aspects of modern American life, brand allegiance in politics is ...
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