The telephone was a sign of being rushed.
– David Halberstam
Related Quotes:
- Being able to ask for helpis not a sign of weakness,it is a sign of strength. – Human Angels
- Compassion is a sign of inner peace. Kindness is a sign of inner strength. Be kind and be compassionate. – Debasish Mridha
- Many people think that crying is a sign of weakness, they’re wrong – it is a sign of healing. – Louise Suzanne Boyd
- Tears are not a sign of weakness. They are a sign of compassion. – Jim George
- I’m not a slave, man. I just gotta sign out, say where I’m going, what time I’ll be back and then I gotta sign back in. – Ben H Winters
- The jangle of the telephone rousted Matt out of a deep sleep. He never dreamed. Dreams were too messy. – Peggy Webb
- Where were you? When everything was falling apart. All my days staying by the telephone. You never rang and all I needed was a call. – The Fray
- The telephone bell was ringing wildly, but without result, since there was no-one in the room but the corpse. – Charles Williams
- So that’s the telephone? They ring, and you run. – Edgar Degas
- Telephone did not come into existence from the persistent improvement of the postcard. – Amit Kalantri
- Similitude of the heart is like that of a telephone operator between man and God. – Riaz Ahmed Gohar Shahi
- The word morality, if we met it in the Bible, would surprise us as much as the word telephone or motor car. – George Bernard Shaw
- In angry protest the red telephone splintered the silence. – Ian Fleming
- Goddamn it, do it yourself. You’re five hundred years old and you can’t use a telephone? Read the directions. What are you, an immortal idiot? – Anne Rice
- It has been a marvellous age of invention: radio, aeroplane, electric light, the telephone, and fellatio. – Christopher Bram
- Officers came and went and were never a part of daily life. – David Halberstam
- The men were always wary of an officer who took form more seriously than function. – David Halberstam
- All professions have some element of theater to them. – David Halberstam
- Hughes might discuss Calvinism ably, but he did not live it, he was-”by Time corporate standards-”just a little lazy. – David Halberstam
- Being well known for being well-known did not necessarily imply intelligence. – David Halberstam
- Newspapers might have as much to do in shaping the course of public events as politicians, – David Halberstam
- If the norm of the society is corrupted, then objective journalism is corrupted too, for it must not challenge the norm. It must accept the norm. – David Halberstam
- Until he (Time’s founder Henry Luce) arrived, news was crime and politics. – David Halberstam
- Education was central to reporting. – David Halberstam
- Until he (Time’s founder Henry Luce) arrived, news was crime and politics. – David Halberstam
- The truth posed a great dilemma for a man who always had to be right, and yet, for all his grandeur, was often wrong. – David Halberstam
- If the Times gave readers far more news, then Lippmann at the Trib made the world seem far more understandable. – David Halberstam
- (I. F. Stone had once called it an exciting paper to read because you never knew on what page you would find a page-one story), – David Halberstam
- Everyone else was trying to make things more complicated and Cronkite, typically, was trying to make them more simple. – David Halberstam
- The author writes that the central conflict within journalist and seller of the American way Henry Luce was between his curiosity and his certitude. – David Halberstam
- he knew, unlike most reporters, how to use pauses and the absence of words as effectively as the words themselves. – David Halberstam
- Young man, Mr. Aubrey has made us so rich that we can now afford to worry about our image. – David Halberstam
- It was the responsibility of a senior fireman to teach as well as to do. – David Halberstam
- In the old days, it had been talent and style and brilliance and now it was more and more productivity. – David Halberstam
- He was perceived to be intellectually promiscuous, a little too eager to please all groups. – David Halberstam
- He could tune her, bringing out her better instincts and filtering out her lesser ones. – David Halberstam
- The faster the motion, the less time to think. Fuselage journalism, Hugh Sidey of Time later called it. – David Halberstam
- Elliston thought consistency less important than vitality and intelligence and passion. – David Halberstam
- It was a wonderful combination for a reporter, the exterior so comforting, the interior so driven. – David Halberstam
- If he had gone to the old school, he was by no means old-school. – David Halberstam