George Will
![George Will](/assets/img/authors/george-will.jpg)
George Will
George Frederick Willis an American newspaper columnist and political commentator. He is a Pulitzer Prize–winner known for his conservative commentary on politics. In 1986, The Wall Street Journal called him "perhaps the most powerful journalist in America," in a league with Walter Lippmann...
ProfessionJournalist
Date of Birth4 May 1941
kennedy
The pilot came back and said he had just heard that Kennedy was shot.
pure
Make my breast transparent as pure crystal, that the world, jealous of me, may see the foulest thought my heart does hold.
george rogers
I am George Rogers Clark. You have just become a prisoner of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
joyful
In coaching, you don't ever really have that joyful fun, but there's no question that it's enjoyable.
competition goes junk truth
The truth of basketball is done in competition and fundamentals and team, but there's a lot of other junk that goes around the game.
challenge coaches coaching danger days gives highs lifestyle nba seldom sleep three tremendous zone
Coaches don't sleep for a reason. They don't sleep because it's a danger zone every night. Very seldom do you ever get two or three days off... The lifestyle of coaching in the NBA is a tremendous challenge that gives you tremendous highs but also tremendous lows.
consistent truthfully
I truthfully think, a consistent coach over 30 years, probably, I'd rather be that than having one championship and mediocrity for years.
longer
Fame is short-lived, and you're the last to know when you are no longer hot.
named settled towns
The Vikings colonized Britain, and a lot of our modern day towns are named after Viking names that settled these big towns.
accuse fair former god hardly learn letters order word
It is hardly fair to accuse us of ignorance when it was made a crime under the former order of things to learn enough about letters to even read the Word of God.
annoying due fact held kids largely maybe moms perceived playing rich sat sent six
Maybe the perceived fact that smart, rich parents tended to have smart, rich kids was largely due to the fact that they also tended to have stay-at-home moms or nannies who read to their kids, held them, put mobiles over their cribs, playing those annoying ditties, and sent them off for SAT training at six months.
create environment genetic home kids parents sensory smart tend
Rich, smart parents tend to have rich, smart kids - not because it's genetic but because they can create a home environment and sensory stimulation that lower-income kids often don't get.
british-actor people
I was paid to be cheeky and people clapped me for it.
british-actor school
I was always in plays at school and in school concerts - you could say I liked to show off.