Famous Quotes & Sayings

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes & Sayings

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Top Famous University Of Michigan Quotes

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By Dov Davidoff

If you hug someone goodbye and their response is what the hell are you doing? - you may want to examine you're definition of close friend. — Dov Davidoff

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By Deb Caletti

When you raise an animal, you live it like your own child. — Deb Caletti

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By Randall Wood

refuses to change the event. They believe the sheriff is making up the death threats in an effort to get them to cancel. Evidently, they are either that stupid or just used to death threats. Anyway, the locals are stepping up security in the surrounding buildings. The police presence is already at the maximum the sheriff can deploy. I've added the Bureau's help. A few dog teams have been added at the entry — Randall Wood

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By George Matthew Adams

You are your greatest investment. The more you store in that mind of yours, the more you enrich your experience, the more people you meet, the more books you read, and the more places you visit, the greater is that investment in all that you are. Everything that you add to your peace of mind, and to your outlook upon life, is added capital that no one but yourself can dissipate. — George Matthew Adams

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By Charles Bukowski

That's what friendship is, sharing the prejudice of experience. — Charles Bukowski

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By Laurence Perrine

A final caution to students: in making judgments on literature, always be honest. Do not pretend to like what you really do not like. Do not be afraid to admit a liking for what you do like. A genuine enthusiasm for the second-rate is much better than false enthusiasm or no enthusiasm at all. Be neither hasty nor timorous in making your judgments. When you have attentively read a poem and thoroughly considered it, decide what you think. Do not hedge, equivocate, or try to find out others' opinions before forming your own. But having formed an opinion and expressed it, do not allow it to petrify. Compare your opinion then with the opinions of others; allow yourself to change it when convinced of its error: in this way you learn. Honestly, courage, and humility are the necessary moral foundations for all genuine literary judgment. — Laurence Perrine

Famous University Of Michigan Quotes By Corra May Harris

If one's natural feelings are suppressed long enough one develops supernatural feelings and feels surer of having a soul. — Corra May Harris