If Occupy Wall Street can see their way to more collaboration with the union movement, then there will be a great deal of political action possible.
I meet people on the street or at book signings and they tend to treat me as if they know me, as if we're connected. It's great.
Child welfare ought really to cover all sorts of topics, such as better water and sanitation and good roads, and clean streets and public parks and playgrounds.
I think this Occupy Wall Street thing is great. I think that is a good thing and that people need to stand up, voice their opinions, and be heard.
Nobody is starving on the streets. We've always taken care of them. We take care of our own; we always have. It is not the government's responsibility.
Communities of color don't understand what it means to be a police officer, the fear that police officers have in just being on the streets.
To be sure, hunters and sportsmen back gun rights. Beyond that, there are millions who see guns as a defense against fear - fear of criminals breaking into their homes or assaulting them on city streets.
Anything we can do in the near future that begins to stimulate the interest of people - seeing somebody down the street have an opportunity to go into space - buoys up the whole neighborhood.
They say somebody's 'street smart.' I feel like, if I got intelligence, it's just a country smart.
When you're on stage you have a very strange knowledge of what the audience is. It isn't exactly a sound - it's a hum, like the streets.
My acting career began on the streets of New York. When I was a cop, I played many impressive roles, from derelict to a doctor, and my life often depended on my performance.
Since childhood, sports has been one of the most important influences in my life.
I'm sure the movie industry is going up but I would love to see more Chinese films about contemporary Chinese about the problems of life on the street.
I don't know how an actress is supposed to observe and create new stuff if she hasn't been on the streets, brushing up against humanity. You have to have a life.
I'll miss the comments from the people on the street who love the show and who have felt its impact on the culture. I won't miss the shooting schedule, though!
Well, playing a guy who writes songs and busks on Grafton Street in Dublin and falls in love with Marketa Irglova wasn't very difficult for me. There was very little acting going on.
People fell in love with Alex Higgins, a working-class fellow from the back streets of Belfast. That's what brought the game alive.
I find music distracting - it takes me out of my head. What I love so much about skiing is the peacefulness.
At sunset we are rattling through the streets of the little town of Cordova.
Worry compounds the futility of being trapped on a dead-end street. Thinking opens new avenues.
The man must have a rare recipe for melancholy, who can be dull in Fleet Street.