Roger Sterling Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Roger Sterling. Here they are! All 8 of them:

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When God closes a door, he opens a dress.
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Roger Sterling
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In fact, Professor Showalter's proposals provide a sterling illustration of the way in which feminism has provided a kind of blueprint for special interests that wish to appropriate the curriculum in order to achieve political goals.
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Roger Kimball (Tenured Radicals: How Politics Has Corrupted Our Higher Education)
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That's the problem. Every time I think back, all the good stuff is with you.
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Roger Sterling (Sterling's Gold: Wit and Wisdom of an Ad Man)
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I've had a lot of time to think about the things I've done and been sorry about. And being with you is not one of them.
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Roger Sterling (Sterling's Gold: Wit and Wisdom of an Ad Man)
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I told him to be himself. That was pretty mean, I guess.
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Roger Sterling (Sterling's Gold: Wit and Wisdom of an Ad Man)
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Have a drink. It'll make me look younger.
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Roger Sterling (Sterling's Gold: Wit and Wisdom of an Ad Man)
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Sterling Memorial, the main library at Yale, had been built to resemble a Gothic cathedral, replete with stained glass, carved stonework, and a crenellated tower. Completed in 1930, the structure was "as near to modern Gothic as we dared" according to its architect, James Gamble Rogers. The use of the word "dare" always intrigued me. It suggested boundaries and infractions. There was, as I had come to expect at Yale, a scandalous story attached to the library's design. The benefactress, an old woman with failing eyesight, wanted a place of worship, and Yale wanted a library. Flouting its own motto, Lux et Veritas, Yale presented her with a structural trompe l'oeil. A cathedral in its outlines, but in its details a pantheon to books, where King Lear was a demigod and Huckleberry Finn a mischievous angel. The visual world had already become a greasy smudge to the benefactress, so the old biddy died never knowing the difference. Light and Truth, indeed.
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Monique Truong (Bitter in the Mouth)
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He was a very private man, a true loner, who lacked the instinctive affability and gregariousness of most successful politicians. One thought of him more easily as a strategist than a candidate. He hated meeting ordinary people, shaking their hands, and making small talk with them. He was always awkward at the clubby male bonding of Congress. When he succeeded it was because he worked harder and thought something out more shrewdly than an opponent and, above all, because he was someone who always wanted it more. Nixon had to win. To lose a race meant losing everythingβ€”so much was at stake, and it was all so personal. Taft, if not exactly jolly and extroverted, won the admiration of his peers because he was intellectually sterling. Ike inspired other men because of his looks, his athletic ability, his natural charm. Nixon was always the outsider; his television adviser in his successful 1968 presidential campaign, Roger Ailes, once said of him that he had the least control of atmosphere of any politician that Ailes had ever met. By that Ailes meant charisma, the capacity to walk into a room and hold the attention of those assembled there. Even success did not really bring him confidence.
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David Halberstam (The Fifties)