The Labor Day Picnic at the Gov.'s Mansion has been canceled due to the tragedy of the recent hurricane. Our family asks that you remember the victims in your prayers.
More Quotes from Bob Riley:
However, before we make the mistake of patting ourselves on the back, let's remember: government does not create jobs. It only helps create the conditions that make jobs more or less likely. The real credit for our economic renewal belongs to the people of Alabama .Bob Riley
If we are going to save this country, if we are going to reestablish that belief in God, it's up to us. If we don't do it, who will?
Bob Riley
The success of our economy shouldn't determine the success of our schools.
Bob Riley
Is Alabama better off than it was three years ago ... four more years.
Bob Riley
If a child lives less than two miles, the parent has the responsibility to get that child to school. A school bus is just something people consider an easy solution.
Bob Riley
The distance-learning program will revolutionize the way we teach our children in Alabama forever. Just think about it A kid in rural Clay County or Wilcox County will have the opportunity to take advanced physics, calculus, or even Chinese.
Bob Riley
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Based on Topics: Prayers Quotes, Tragedy QuotesBased on Keywords: govs
On embarking to return we could perceive no sign of One Tree Island; and as we swept down towards the sea the leafy top of a tree seen in the clear water under the boat was the only evidence of its existence; though a few hours ago it had formed so prominent an object.
George Grey
If all consciousness is subject to essential laws in a manner similar to that in which spatial reality is subject to mathematical laws, then these essential laws will be of most fertile significance in investigating facts of the conscious life of human and brute animals.
Edmund Husserl
It bothers me that I won't live to see the end of the century, because, when I was young, in St. Louis, I remember saying to Marilyn, my sister by adoption, that that was how long I wanted to live: seventy years.
Harold Brodkey