Hartford Whalers Quotes & Sayings
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Top Hartford Whalers Quotes

Wisdom is essential;
everyone must acquire it.
Folly is dangerous;
everyone must run from it. — Matshona Dhliwayo

We will have to remember where our cranks belong in our national life, so that they can resume their proper roles as lonely guardians of the frontiers of the national imagination, prodding and pushing, getting us to think about things in new ways, but also knowing that their place is of necessity a lonely and humble one. There is nothing wrong with a country that has people who put saddles on their dinosaurs. It's a wonderful show and we should watch them and applaud. We have no obligation to climb aboard and ride. — Charles P. Pierce

I consider nothing low but ignorance, vice, and meanness, characteristics generally found where the animal propensities predominate over the higher sentiments. — William John Wills

Nations touch at their summits. — Walter Bagehot

If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the rhetorical question — Josh Stern

Thankfully, I have a job where it does not matter in the least what I look like. — Jason Aaron

I'm grateful for the opportunities God gave me to minister to people in high places; people in power have spiritual and personal needs like everyone else, and often they have no one to talk to. — Billy Graham

She slept a lot and didn't dream, and on most occasions she was sorry to wake up. Everything disappeared when she was asleep. — Markus Zusak

I believe a great performer is someone who sounds just as great live as they do in the studio and vice versa. They should know how to work the stage. — Haley Reinhart

I used to fall hard when I was younger, and it occupies a lot of journals and redundant preoccupation and analysis. It is a state in which you are in an overheated fervor of production - of mental production - where you're analyzing everything that happened. And what they said! And how they looked! Did that touch mean something, or not? Everything is sort of endowed with meaning, but you're also hopelessly boring and out of the world. — Todd Haynes

Once an activity has been socialized, it is impossible to point out, by concrete example, how men in a free market could better conduct it. How, for instance, can one compare a socialized post office with private postal delivery when the latter has been outlawed? — Leonard Read