This is what, this year, people looked at, selected as the best and the
worst, read most, remembered, cared less and completely forgot about...
2005 IS THE YEAR OF
MOURNING, REMEMBERING AND LEARNING
A
YEAR TO REMEMBER AND TO FORGET...ALL DEPENDS ON WHAT WE HAVE ACCOMPLISHED
AND WHAT WE STILL NEED...AND ALSO HOW WELL AND GENUINELY SHALL WE REMEMBER
THE DEPARTED BELOVED ONES...
Hollywood's golden era legends and stars, known worldwide and remembered
by few, stage giants, playwrights, TV icons, composers, moviemakers, pop
singers, heads of state, even a pope died this year. 2005 was a very bad
year to many of us: Political deceptions, markets crashes, celebrities and
beloved stars indictments, outrageous and amusing scandals and irritant
public displays, hurricanes, war, always war, and of course, the departure
of many friends, role models and beloved ones. And this makes me reflect
on the "real" meaning of our tragicomic existence on this planet , thus,
transforming this reflection into a moment to anchor myself and
reconsider priorities, to reassess my needs, reshape positive and loving
thoughts, and go back to mourn the dead. C'est la vie.
STARS WHO DIED THIS YEAR
Several
actors known mostly for their voices passed away. Len Dresslar "ho ho hoed"
for the Jolly Green Giant. Henry Corden "yabba dabba dooed" for Fred
Flintstone and Thurl Ravenscroft growled "they're greatttt!" for Tony the
Tiger. Paul Winchell was the voice of his dummy Jerry Mahoney and Pooh's
friend Tigger. Also, several silver screen legends, outstanding authors, TV
stars died, including Johnny Carson, Bob Denver, James Doohan, Don Adams,
Eddie Albert and Barney Martin, who played Jerry's dad on "Seinfeld.", etc.
In
music:
Ray Peterson,
singer ("Tell Laura I Love Her"), he was 69.
Keith Knudsen,
(drummer for the Doobie Brothers), he was 57.
Jewel "Sammi" Smith,
country singer (" Help Me Make It Through The Night"), he was 62.
Bobby Short,
pianist, for 35 years at the Carlyle Hotel in New York City, he was 80.
Singer/songwriter JIMMY GRIFFIN, 61, died January 11, 2005, in
Nashville. Best known for his work with 1970s soft-rock act Bread, Griffin
gained acclaim as a songwriter with cuts recorded by Rudy Vallee, Ed Ames,
Lesley Gore, Bobby Vee, and others. Following the breakup of Bread in 1977,
Griffin formed many other groups, the most successful of which was the
Remingtons, who scored a top 10 country hit.
Songwriter/drummer JIM
CAPALDI, 60, died January 28 in London. Capaldi was a member of British
rock act Traffic from its formation in 1967 until it disbanded in 1974.
Traffic was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004. Capaldi
released his first solo album in 1972. He remained in demand as a
musician/writer, working with such artists as Bob Marley, Carlos Santana,
and Eric Clapton.
R&B
singer TYRONE DAVIS, 66, died February 9 in Chicago. A major figure
in Chicago R&B history, Davis had three number ones on the Billboard R&B
chart between 1968 and 1975: "Turn Back the Hands of Time," "Can I Change My
Mind," and "Turning Point."
Country singer-songwriter
SAMMI SMITH, 61, died February 12 in Oklahoma City. Smith took the Kris
Kristofferson-penned "Help Me Make It Through the Night" to number one on
the Billboard country chart. The Grammy-winning tune was one of 37 singles
for Smith on the country chart between 1968 and 1986.
Broadway baritone JOHN
RAITT, 88, died February 20 in Los Angeles. Raitt appeared as Billy
Bigelow in the original 1945 production of Rodgers & Hammerstein's
"Carousel." As Sid Sorokin in "The Pajama Game," Raitt starred in the 1954
Broadway production and the 1957 film version opposite Doris Day. In 1995,
Angel released John Raitt: The Broadway Legend, which included
three duets with his daughter, Bonnie Raitt.
Singer-songwriter CHRIS
LEDOUX, 56, died March 9 in Casper, Wyoming. LeDoux became country
music's standard-bearer for songs of the American West. By some estimates,
he has sold 14 million albums, many of which were bought at rodeos and by
mail order. His influence on a generation of young country singers became
evident in 1989 when Garth Brooks name-checked LeDoux in his debut single,
"Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old)"; Brooks' current hit, "Good Ride
Cowboy," is a tribute to LeDoux.
Crowded House drummer
PAUL HESTER, 46, died March 28 near Melbourne, Australia. Hester played
in several small bands before joining New Zealand group Split Enz in 1983.
He and Split Enz singer Neil Finn formed Crowded House in 1985 with bassist
Nick Seymour. The group became one of Australia's most successful bands in
the late 1980s/early 1990s.
Pianist/composer JOHNNIE
JOHNSON, 80, died April 13 in St. Louis. Johnson wrote several hits with
longtime collaborator Chuck Berry, including "Roll Over Beethoven" and "No
Particular Place to Go," both of which reached number two on the Billboard
R&B singles chart. Berry's hit "Johnny B. Goode" was a tribute to Johnson.
Johnson was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001.
Popular Tejano singer
LAURA CANALES, 50, died April 16 in Corpus Christi, Texas. Canales made
her recording debut in 1973 with Los Unicos and then joined seminal group El
Conjunto Bernal for a short stint. In 1981, she formed Laura Canales &
Encanto. The title track from their debut CD, "Si Vivi Contigo," was her
first major hit.
Jazz musician PERCY HEATH,
81, died April 28 in Southampton, New York. His gentle, swinging bass
underpinned the Modern Jazz Quartet for more than 40 years. During the late
'50s and early '60s, MJQ's recordings on Prestige and Atlantic were
commercially successful. When the MJQ went on the first of several breaks in
the 1970s, Percy and his brothers Albert (a drummer) and Jimmy (a tenor
saxophonist) formed the Heath Brothers. Heath returned to the MJQ when it
regrouped in 1980 and stayed in the bass chair until 1994.
R&B singer-songwriter
LUTHER VANDROSS, 54, died July 1 in New Jersey. Blessed with a silky
voice that seduced not only millions of fans but also noted collaborators
such as David Bowie and Aretha Franklin, Vandross was considered the premier
soul balladeer of his generation. He had suffered a stroke shortly before
the release of his final, Grammy-winning album Dance With My Father.
Four Tops member RENALDO
"OBIE" BENSON, 60, died July 1 in Detroit. He also cowrote the landmark
Marvin Gaye tune "What's Going On?"
Singer/songwriter/guitarist
JOHN HERALD, 65, died July 19 in West Hurley, New York. In 1958,
Herald cofounded the Greenbriar Boys, the New York-based bluegrass band that
became mainstays of the Greenwich Village folk scene. Herald's tunes were
recorded by Peter, Paul & Mary, Linda Ronstadt, and Maria Muldaur.
British R&B singer LONG
JOHN BALDRY, 64, died July 21 in Vancouver. Baldry, whose nickname was
attributed to his 6-foot-7-inch height, was one of the founding fathers of
British rock-and-roll in the early 1960s. He played with influential British
bands Blues Incorporated and Cyril Davies' R&B All Stars. He later fronted
the Hoochie Coochie Men, which included Rod Stewart. Baldry scored a number
one UK hit with the ballad "Let the Heartaches Begin" in 1967.
R&B singer/songwriter/Chi-Lites
member EUGENE RECORD, 64, died July 22. He was best known for writing
the smooth soul group's biggest R&B/pop crossover hits in the early 1970s,
"Have You Seen Her" and "Oh Girl." Record's warm tenor, sweet falsetto, and
penchant for breaking mid-song into spoken verse became hallmarks of the
Chi-Lites' romantic sound.
Jazz musician ELI "LUCKY"
THOMPSON, 81, died July 30 in Seattle. Thompson played with the bop
era's greats, including Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. His composition
"Blue 'n' Boogie," featured on Miles Davis' 1954 hard-bop album Walkin',
became a jazz standard.
Musician IBRAHIM FERRER,
78, died August 6 in Havana. Ferrer, a little-known singer who had already
retired, catapulted to fame with Buena Vista Social Club, which has
sold more than 6 million units worldwide since its 1997 release. His solo
album Buena Vista Social Club Presents...Ibrahim Ferrer sold 1.5
million copies worldwide. In 2004, Ferrer won a Grammy Award for Buenos
Hermanos, but the US government would not grant him a visa to receive
the award.
Mississippi bluesman
"LITTLE" MILTON CAMPBELL, 70, died August 4 in Memphis. Little Milton
wrote and recorded the widely covered blues anthem "The Blues Is Alright."
He was 18 when he began recording with Ike Turner for Sam Phillips' Sun
Records. In 1961, after an A&R stint with Bobbin Records, Little Milton
moved to Chess Records, where he scored the number one R&B hit "We're Gonna
Make It" on Chess subsidiary Checker in 1965. He cut four additional top 10
hits at Chess before heading to Stax Records in the 1970s. In 1984, he
joined Malaco Records.
Jazz bassist AL MCKIBBON,
86, died August 5 in Los Angeles. One of the last great string bass players
from the bop era, McKibbon performed with such jazz giants as Dizzy
Gillespie, Miles Davis, and Thelonious Monk. He moved to New York in 1943
after bandleader Lucky Millinder hired him. There, he played with such
leading jazz figures as saxophonist Coleman Hawkins. McKibbon moved to Los
Angeles in 1958 and played in the staff orchestras of CBS and NBC and on
albums by Frank Sinatra, Randy Newman, and Sammy Davis Jr. He is also
featured on Davis' The Complete Birth of the Cool recordings.
Acclaimed fiddle virtuoso
VASSAR CLEMENTS, 77, died August 16 outside of Nashville. Known to some
as the "Miles Davis of bluegrass," Clements began performing with Bill
Monroe's Blue Grass Boys when he was just 14, becoming a regular member of
the legendary group in 1949. Clements' work on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's
groundbreaking 1972 multi-artist album, Will the Circle Be Unbroken,
was a milestone in a career that spanned more than five decades.
Bluesman RL BURNSIDE,
78, died September 1 in Memphis. Burnside first recorded with Arhoolie
Records in 1968. His appearance in the 1991 documentary Deep Blues
and on the 1992 Atlantic soundtrack album earned him wider attention in the
United States. He became a cult hero with the crossover collaboration for
Matador, A Ass Pocket of Whiskey, with underground rock act Jon
Spencer Blues Explosion in 1996.
Singer/guitarist CLARENCE
"GATEMOUTH" BROWN, 81, died September 10 in Orange, Texas. Brown's best
commercial success came in the United States after he signed with Rounder
Records in the 1980s. His "Alright Again!" for the label earned him a best
traditional blues recording Grammy Award in 1982. He was inducted into the
Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1999.
Singer/songwriter/producer
WILLIE HUTCH, 59, died September 19 in Dallas. In 1970, producer Hal
Davis asked Hutch to help complete the Jackson 5's "I'll Be There." It
became a multiformat number one hit, as did a subsequent collaboration with
the quintet, "Never Can Say Goodbye." Hutch also logged production credits
on Motown albums by the Miracles, Marvin Gaye, Smokey Robinson, Michael
Jackson, and Diana Ross, among others. His pinnacle as an artist was 1975's
"Love Power," which peaked at number eight on the R&B chart.
Jazz singer/pianist
SHIRLEY HORN, 71, died October 20 in Cheverly, Maryland. Long critically
respected, Horn became an unlikely star in her 60s with a series of albums
for Verve Records in the 1990s. Accompanying herself at the piano, Horn and
her trademark vocal style became a major influence on such younger jazz
singer/pianists as Diana Krall and Norah Jones. Horn was nominated for nine
Grammy Awards in the last decade and won for best jazz vocal performance in
1998 for her album I Remember Miles, dedicated to Miles Davis.
Musician LINK WRAY, 76, died November 5 in
Copenhagen. In a career that spanned six decades, Wray made his mark with a
piercing guitar sound that paved the way for punk and heavy metal. Credited
with inventing the power chord and pioneering distortion by punching holes
in his amplifier, Wray is best known for his 1958 instrumental single
"Rumble" and for "Raw-Hide," recorded with his band, the Wraymen.
Singer-songwriter CHRIS WHITLEY, 45, died November
20. The Texas-reared artist, best known for the tune "Living with the Law,"
recorded for Columbia, ATO, and Messenger Records, which in July released
his 11th album, Soft Dangerous Shores. A new release, Reiter In,
will appear next year.
People In Film Who Died In late 2004:
- John Drew Barrymore - Actor
- Elmer Bernstein - Composer
- Marlon Brando - Actor
- Italia Coppola - Mother of director
Francis Ford Coppola and actress Talia Shire.
- Rodney Dangerfield - Actor
- Frances Dee - Actress
- Eric Douglas - Actor - Youngest son of
Kirk Douglas. Half-brother of Michael Douglas.
- Jerry Goldsmith - Composer
- Spalding Gray - Actor
- Albert Henderson - Actor
- Howard Keel - Actor
- Alan King - Actor
- Janet Leigh - Actress
- Billy May - Composer
- Mercedes McCambridge - Actress
- Ann Miller - Actress
- Stuart O'Brien - Editor
- Robert Pastorelli - Actor
- Tony Randall - Actor
- John Randolph - Actor
- Ronald Reagan - Actor
- Christopher Reeve - Actor
- Isabel Sanford - Actress
- Carrie Snodgress - Actress
- Ray Stark - Producer
- Jan Sterling - Actress
- Ingrid Thulin - Actress
- Peter Ustinov - Actor
- Theo van Gogh - Director
- Joe Viterelli - Actor
- Noble Willingham - Actor
- Paul Winfield - Actor
- Ralph E. Winters - Editor
- Fay Wray - Actress
- Jerry Orbach - Actor
People In Film Who Died In 2005
- Don Adams - Actor
- Moustapha Akkad - Director/Producer
- Eddie Albert - Actor
- Anne Bancroft - Actress
- Lamont Bentley - Actor
- Tommy Bond - Actor
- Gabrielle Brune - Actress
- Constance Cummings - Actress
- Ossie Davis - Actor
- Sandra Dee - Actress
- Bob Denver - Actor
- James Doohan - Actor
- Robert Fortier - Actor
- Gregg Hoffman - Producer
- James Holden - Actor
- Basil Hoskins - Actor
- Dan Lee - Animator
- Barney Martin - Actor
- Virginia Mayo - Actress
- Matthew McGrory - Actor
- Noriyuki "Pat" Morita - Actor
- Robert F. Newmyer - Producer
- Sal Pacino - Actor - Father of Al Pacino
- Brock Peters - Actor
- Richard Pryor - Actor/Comedian
- Nipsey Russell - Actor
- Sandy Sanders - Actor
- Vincent Schiavelli - Actor
- Simone Simon - Actress
- John Spencer - Actor
- Wendie Jo Sperber - Actress
- Michael Vale - Actor/mascot of Dunkin' Donuts
- Sandy Ward - Actor
- Robert Wise - Director/Producer/Editor
- Thelma White - Actress
- Ruth Warrick - Actress
- John Vernon - Actor
- Brian Kelly - Actor
- Sandra Dee - Actress
- John Raitt -Actor
- Teresa Wright - Actress
- Ruth Hussey - Actress
- Leon Askin - Actor
- June Haver - Actress
- Norman Bird - Actor
- Sir John Mills - Actor
- Frank Gorshin -Actor
- Mason Adams - Actor
- J.D. Cannon - Actor
- Eddie Albert - Actor
- Dana Elcart - Actor
- Lon McCallister - Actor
- Lane Smith - Actor
- Kevin Hagen - Actor
- Frances Langford - Actress
- Geraldine Fitzgerald - Actress
- James Doohan - Actor
- Barbara Bel Geddes - Actress
- 59. Brock Peters - Actor
- Bob Denver - Actor
- Don Adams - Actor
- Wendie Jo Sperber - Actress
- Michael Vale - Actor
- John Spencer - Actor
- Vincent Schiavelli - Actor

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CELEBRITIES WHO DIED IN 2005
1.Rose Mary Woods,
secretary to Richard Nixon who took blame for 18 ½ minute gap in
tapes, age 86.
2.Johnny Carson, comedian
("The Tonight Show"), age 79.
3.Arthur Miller,
playright ("Death of a Salesman") once married to Marilyn Monroe, age
89.
4.Hunter S. Thompson,
writer ("Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas"), age 67.
5.John DeLorean,
auto magnate, made time-traveling vehicle for "Back to the Future"
films, age 80.
6.Johnnie Cochran,
star attorney, age 67.
7.Terri Schiavo,
age 41.
8.Frank Perdue,
the chicken guy, age 84.
9.Pope John Paul II,
age 84.
10.Dale Messick,
cartoonist ("Brenda Starr, Reporter") age 98.
11.Saul Bellow,
author ("The Adventures of Augie March"), age 89.
12.Prince Rainier III,
of Monaco, was married to Grace Kelly, age 81.
13.William J. Bell,
soap opera writer & creator ("The Young and the Restless"), age 78 .
14.Peter
Jennings, ABC news anchorman died of lung cancer after years of
smoking, he was 74.
15.Sherman
Loudermilk, host of "Cowboy Slim" TV Show,
age 92.
16.Peter Rodino, House
Judiciary Committee chairman who directed the impeachment
investigation of Richard Nixon, age 95.
17.Howard Morris,
actor/director (Ernest T. Bass on the "Andy Griffith Show", age 85.
18.Ismail Merchant,
producer ("Howards End", "The Remains of the Day"), age 68.
19.George Mikan,
Minneapolis Lakers basketball player, age 80.
20.Georgie Woods
legendary Philadelphia radio broadcaster ("The Guy With the Goods" on
WDAS and WHAT), age 78.
21.Shana Alexander,
pioneering journalist ("Point-Counterpoint" segments on "60 Minutes"),
age 79.
22.Paul Winchell,
ventriloquist (voice of Tigger in Walt Disney's "Winnie-the-Pooh";
"The Paul Winchell and Jerry Mahoney Show"), age 82.
23.Shelby Foote,
novelist and historian ( "The Civil War: A Narrative"), age 88.
24.Ernest Lehman,
screenwriter ("North by Northwest," "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"
and "The Sound of Music,"), age 89.
25.Hank Stram,
innovative coach of the Kansas City Chiefs and Pro Football Hall of
Famer, age 82.
26.L. Patrick Gray,
F.B.I. Director (May 3, 1972 - April 27, 1973) known as a Nixon
loyalist during the Watergate years, who totally missed the fact that
his former deputy, W. Mark Felt, was Deep Throat, age 88.
27.Retired Vice Adm. James
Stockdale, Medal of Honor recipient for
resisting his North Vietnamese captors; Ross Perot's running mate
president in 1992, age 81.
28.Ret. Gen. William
Westmoreland, soldier with the dubious
distinction of having been leader of the U.S. forces in Vietnam from
1964 to 1968, age 91 .
29.King Fahd,
Saudi Arabian monarch since 1982, age 82 or 84.
30.John H. Johnson,
publisher of "Ebony" and "Jet" magazines, age 87.
31.Judith Rossner,
author ("Looking for Mr. Goodbar"), age 70.
32.William Rehnquist,
Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court, age 80.
33.Simon Wiesenthal,
Holocaust survivor who devoted his life to hunting Nazi
war criminals, age 96.
34.Robert Wise,
producer/director ("West Side Story" and "Sound of Music"), age 91.
35.M. Scott Peck,
author ("The Road Less Traveled''), age 69.
36.August Wilson,
playwright , Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winner ("Fences" and "Ma
Rainey's Black Bottom"), age 60.
37.Nipsey Russell,
"poet laureate of television" ("Hollywood Squares," "The $50,000
Pyramid," and "Match Game"), age 80.
38.Rosa Parks,
activist and "the mother of civil rights" in America, age 92.
39.Skitch Henderson,
composer, conductor, bandleader ("The Tonight Show"), age 87.
40.Michael Piller,
writer/producer (Star Trek TNG, DS9 and Voyager), age 57.
41.Ruth Siems,
invented Stove Top Stuffing, age 74.
42.Ralph Edwards,
early TV pioneer and host ("This Is Your Life"), age 92.
43.Eugene McCarthy,
presidential candidate (1968) and U.S. Senator (1959-1971), age 89.
44.Jack Anderson,
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, age 83.

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WHAT DID WE LEARN THIS YEAR?
What did we learn this
year, and from this year? Those who know a lot, humbly and admirably
believe that they know nothing about life and there are so many things to
learn about, understand, appreciate and discover. Those who know nothing
still believe that they know everything. And I am quite happy with that.
For, we need all kinds of people to fill this vain world of ours. And more
pretentious, idiot and silly people I meet or learn about, happier in my
humility, I become. For, either, selfishly, I do not need more
competition, or wisely, I realize that "Plus ca change, plus ca reste la
meme chose."
And what did I learn
this year or from this year? Many things. And among those things: Nothing
equals in life, the goodness of the heart, unconditional love,
unrestricted appreciation of others talents, infinite forgiveness,
compassion and unlimited generosity toward everybody and especially toward
those who cannot return the favor...and perhaps, just perhaps, a bright
honest mind. Years ago, I wrote those lines (below) in my books "SECRET
BOOK OF NATIONS", and "STORIES I NEVER TOLD", among others....
And as of today, they
remain very a propos. I love to share them with you. This is what
I wrote some 20 years ago:

Painting: "Leave Your
Suspicions Behind The Rain", oil on canvas, 1979, by the author.
____________________________________
"For the
STRONG, there are two kinds of truth. One for each occasion. For the
weak, there are all kinds of truth and each one eliminates the other..."
from "THE SECRET BOOK OF NATIONS".
“If you can’t see the light in the dark, don’t
expect to see it in the early morning.” from “ Stories I never Told”.
“Two kinds of people usually don’t like you
much; your boss if you are smarter than him, and your employee if they are
smarter than you.” ... "Don’t tell anybody, I know what you are thinking,
if you don’t know, and especially if you do.”
Book “Don’t Tell How Much You Know”
"A very
small umbrella makes you wet. A very big umbrella makes you sweat.”
“Those who did not live
their life to its fullest, remain on the shore. Only those who believed in
its rainbow could sail the high seas of meaningful accomplishments and
freedom,” from “Memories
From Tomorrow” 1979.
“The generosity of your heart is your one way
ticket to immortality.”
“Be always generous with and toward everybody
and particularly with those who cannot return the favor.”
“The universe is made for all of us. There are
plenty of rooms. Do not take two.”
“Fight loudly, give and forgive silently.”
“Don’t tell a lie if you have a bad memory.”
“You might conquer the world with your wealth
and power but you will always depart alone. Only unconditional love makes
others feel your presence, might, wealth and power wherever you go. And
when you go, you will never depart alone.”
“Don’t stretch your feet longer than your bed
if you have a hungry dog at home”
“Always ask a baker to cook your bread, even
if he takes half of it.”
“He laughed for so long, he forgot what he was
laughing about.”
“Lawyers should only be allowed to drive on a
one-way street.”
“If a monkey is reading your map, don’t expect
to arrive on time.”
“A woman holds the umbrella and the man holds
the woman.”
“Count to ten, but please let me know what you
are thinking about.”
“You can turn in circles only if you are the
Earth we live on.”
“Guests who arrive late are always excused if
their gifts arrived first.”
“You can hide the eggs in your rear pocket if
you can manage to stand up all night long.”
“You want to know the occupants of a house,
check first their back yard.”
“Don’t call a plumber if you haven’t paid the
water bill.”
“Give me a happy family and I will give you a
happy country.”
“Make your country a country of milk powder
not gun powder.”
“The most beautiful sight to my eyes is the
smile of the woman I love.”
“As my friend you will always enter my humble
home from the front door and will leave from the back. But, if you change
that, I will know you are no longer my friend.”
“All happy families are alike in their
happiness. Only unhappy families are different in their sadness”
“In a race, you should always finish first,
because only your wife and your dog will remember you finished second.”
“Do not volunteer if you are not needed. It is
just like a free advice; your friends don’t need it. Your enemies would
not believe it.”
“It takes fifty chinchilla corpses to make one
coat, and just one to wear it.”
“Once a wise man said: A penny saved is a
penny earned. The truth I tell you: A penny well spent is two pennies
earned.”
“Do not fully trust a man who has never lost a
thing in his life.”
“Dry dock, empty ship.”
“Passion without substance is like a French
onion soup. Very hot at the beginning, very cold short after.”
“In a competitive and materialistic society,
you are not Who you are but, what people think You are.”
“Do not worry about what people might think of
you. Worry if they begin to believe you do.”
“A day without charity is a lost day.”
“When you shake the hand of a gentleman, look
in his eyes. When you shake the hand of a thief, look around.”
“Be yourself when you meet others. Be the
others when you meet yourself.”
“When you are rich, everybody listens and few
hear you. When you are poor, nobody listens and everybody hears you.”
“Watch your enemy once, your friends twice,
and yourself all the time.”
“If you have fooled me three times, is because
I let you fool me twice.”
“Don’t milk the cow if your bucket is not
handy.”
“Count your sheep ten times a day, and once if
you have a fence.”
“If you are rich, people think you know.”
“You cannot sell ice to the Eskimos, but you
can always try.”
“Bald men don’t need a comb.”
“In a parade, always ride the white horse.”
“Those who arrive late to super will eat only
crumbs.”
“Those who arrive late, always have a reason.”
“Those who arrive late, hear only yesterdays
news.”
“Instead of feeding the hungry salmons and
lobsters, teach them how to fish.”
“Go early to bed and get bored alone.”
“Two kinds of people I wonder about: Those who
go to bed early and those who wake up late.”
“The world was not built in one day. How do
you know that?”
“They told you everything that glitters is not
gold. But, they didn’t tell you what it is!”
“They told you a bird in hand is better than
two in the bush. The truth I tell you, three birds in the bush is the best
of all, because you make the spring come earlier this year.”
“A man who has always dirty hands is bad…a man
who has always clean hands is worse.”
“You know the man when he leaves not when he
arrives.”
“Fear those who can see in the dark.”
“Trust yourself all the time, but doubt your
greatness every time you can.”
“Every time you give, you grow one inch
taller.”
“If you can walk on eggs, you can walk on
nails.”
“A man who fears and dares is a brave man, a
man who dares and does not fear is a fool.”
“Lower the fence of your vineyard, and the
size of your bottles will shrink.”
“Wash your hands once before you eat your meal
and twice after if you did not share it with others.”
“Be proud of yourself once, if you are a
teacher, and twice if your student becomes one.”
“Ten more commandments and you have ten more
priests.”
“The church next door always has the lower
saint.”
“Don’t tell me why, show me how.”
“Bad employer, good check. Good employer, bad
check.”
“A house with only one door makes too much
noise.”
“If French aristocrats knew how to make bread,
they would have saved their heads.”
“I worry about those people who come to a new
country with an old face.”
“If the top of your head is made out of
butter, don’t walk in the sun.”
“If you cannot take the heat, don’t light a
fire.”
“Nothing in life is more valuable than life
itself, if others are a part of it.”
“Take once, give twice.”
“If you are great, they will hail you. If you
are greater, they will trail you. If you are the greatest, they will nail
you.”

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