A Quote by Sondra Radvanovsky

My roots really instilled Chicago values in me. — © Sondra Radvanovsky
My roots really instilled Chicago values in me.
I'm really close to my mother. She sacrificed a lot for me and my sister. She gave up her career. Whatever I am today is due to the values my mother instilled in me.
If people want to get to know me better, they've got to know my parents and the values my parents instilled in me, and the fact that I was raised in West Texas, in the middle of the desert, a long way away from anywhere, hardly. There's a certain set of values you learn in that experience.
My parents instilled a lot of American values in me. They encouraged me to work hard and told me that anything was possible for me because I was a citizen.
Values are most important. Democratic values have to be instilled from childhood and the child sees at an early stage in life in every situation in society.
I owe my drive and determination to my upbringing, which instilled in me a set of values that make me who I am.
While I will never demonize those who disagree with me, the Hoosier values instilled in me from a young age have always inspired me to protect life and the unborn.
One good thing is I was instilled with really good values. My mom treats everyone the same.
My parents instilled something greater than myself. They instilled faith in me.
It really wasn't about picking Chicago. I feel like Chicago picked me.
My activism did not spring from my being gay, or, for that matter, from my being black. Rather, it is rooted fundamentally in my Quaker upbringing and the values that were instilled in me by my grandparents who reared me.
Ali vs. Stevenson would have served as a symbolic battle between the United States and Cuba, capitalism and communism: Castro's values instilled in his boxers pitted against the values of 'merchandise' boxers from the rest of the world.
It's really cheesy, but basically, 'Roots' got me to find out my own roots.
My parents were both born and raised in the Depression. They instilled great values about integrity and the importance of hard work, and I've taken that with me to every job.
I have never in my life let a man disrespect me, verbally or physically, and that will never change. I feel very strongly about this because it's something my mother instilled in me and that I have instilled in my daughters.
Chick-fil-A values are not Chicago values.
My father instilled those hard-working values.
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