C Wilbur Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to C Wilbur. Here they are! All 7 of them:

In 1954, then-Senator (later Vice President, then President) Lyndon Baines Johnson wrote a piece of legislation, the Johnson Amendment, which would go a long way to silence the churches and synagogues who were not yet asleep at the switch. He would threaten the clergy with a response from the Internal Revenue Service if they were to take up social and political issues from their pulpits. This law, or threat, still stands today, and anyone holding a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status with the United States government knows that it has teeth that will bite hard should you test its veracity. The action taken by LBJ has effectively removed the voice of righteousness from the marketplace, and essentially it enables government to operate without a conscience.
Paul Wilbur (A King is Coming)
They lived in the same house,” McCullough writes, “worked together six days a week, ate their meals together, kept their money in a joint bank account, even ‘thought together,’ Wilbur said.” Neither brother ever married or, apparently, had romantic attachments. The most important woman in their life was their younger sister, Katharine, whose steadfast devotion to her brilliant brothers would be difficult to accept as anything but cliché were it not for the evidence in her correspondence with her brothers. These letters are a large part of the record of what happened at Kitty Hawk, N.C., ideal material for McCullough’s narrative gifts as he unreels the unlikely story that took place on that thin strip of beach. The Wrights had the good wishes and eager
Anonymous
Wilbur Wright set the tone in 1909 when he said, “Like all novices we began with the helicopter [in childhood] but soon saw that it had no future and dropped it. The helicopter does with great labor only what the balloon does without labor, and is no more fitted than the balloon for rapid horizontal flight. If its engine stops it must fall with deathly violence for it can neither float like the balloon nor glide like the aeroplane. The helicopter is much easier to design than the aeroplane but is worthless when done.”1
Richard C. Kirkland (MASH Angels: Tales of an Air-Evac Helicopter Pilot in the Korean War)
In answer to an inquiry Wilbur sent to the United States Weather Bureau in Washington about prevailing winds around the country, they were provided extensive records of monthly wind velocities at more than a hundred Weather Bureau stations, enough for them to take particular interest in a remote spot on the Outer Banks of North Carolina called Kitty Hawk, some seven hundred miles from Dayton. Until then, the farthest the brothers had been from home was a trip to Chicago for the Columbian Exposition of 1893. And though they had “roughed it” some on a few camping trips, it had been nothing like what could be expected on the North Carolina coast. To be certain Kitty Hawk was the right choice, Wilbur wrote to the head of the Weather Bureau station there, who answered reassuringly about steady winds and sand beaches. As could be plainly seen by looking at a map, Kitty Hawk also offered all the isolation one might wish for to carry on experimental work in privacy. Still further encouragement came when, on August 18, 1900, the former postmaster at Kitty Hawk, William J. Tate, sent a letter saying: Mr. J. J. Dosher of the Weather Bureau here has asked me to answer your letter to him, relative to the fitness of Kitty Hawk as a place to practice or experiment with a flying machine, etc. In answering I would say that you would find here nearly any type of ground you could wish; you could, for instance, get a stretch of sandy land one mile by five with a bare hill in center 80 feet high, not a tree or bush anywhere to break the evenness of the wind current. This in my opinion would be a fine place; our winds are always steady, generally from 10 to 20 miles velocity per hour. You can reach here from Elizabeth City, N.C. (35 miles from here) by boat . . . from Manteo 12 miles from here by mail boat every Mon., Wed., & Friday. We have telegraph communication & daily mails. Climate healthy, you could find good place to pitch tent & get board in private family provided there were not too many in your party; would advise you to come anytime from September 15 to October 15. Don’t wait until November. The autumn generally gets a little rough by November. If you decide to try your machine here and come, I will take pleasure in doing all I can for your convenience and success and pleasure, and I assure you you will find a hospitable people when you come among us. That decided the matter. Kitty Hawk it would be.
David McCullough (The Wright Brothers)
All of the following populations are at increased risk for developing asthma EXCEPT: A) Obese children. B) Female children. C) Children exposed to tobacco. D) Children with atopy. E) City children.
Mark Graber (Graber and Wilbur's Family Medicine Examination and Board Review)
When treating AOM, which of these individuals should be considered a treatment failure and switched to another antibiotic? A) A patient with a fever that continues at 24 hours after starting an oral antibiotic B) A child who is still tugging at his ear 5 days into a course of antibiotics C) A symptomatic child who still has a bulging, red, immobile TM 3 days after starting antibiotics D) A child who continues to have rhinorrhea 1 week after starting antibiotics E) All of the above
Mark Graber (Graber and Wilbur's Family Medicine Examination and Board Review)
I plowed right through the first guy. I literally flung him over my head. I’m not sure how. It was instinct. Survival. How I kept the football? I have no idea, but with the second guy, my left hand went out, planted in his chest, and miraculously, he didn’t keep coming. He slipped to the side. He was on the ground, and I was all by myself. I heard nothing. I saw only the end zone. The rest was a blur. I slipped. I slid. I dodged tackles. If it were possible, I’d probably punched and kicked my way. I don’t know if you call it grit and determination or an out-of-body experience. I’d say the latter. When I finally came to, I was being hoisted in the air like a trophy by none other than Wilbur Downs.
C.G. Cooper (Greco)