Famous Quotes & Sayings

Joblove Genovese Quotes & Sayings

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Top Joblove Genovese Quotes

I really miss wearing costumes and makeup. — Brendon Urie

Notes are expensive ... spend them wisely — B.B. King

Inflation is repudiation. — Calvin Coolidge

We are beaten, we will make no bones about it; but we are not too badly beaten still to fight. — James Larkin

What's right about America is that although we have a mess of problems, we have great capacity - intellect and resources - to do some thing about them. — Henry Ford II

My balls shrank in terror. I was convinced we were going to die. — Manel Loureiro

I know that I am more than my personality, my body, and my body image. — Oprah Winfrey

Life is that which - pressingly, persistently, unfailingly, imperially - interrupts. — Cynthia Ozick

Make hay in May for you may never know what June is coming with and you may never know what July will present! When you see May, make hay! — Ernest Agyemang Yeboah

A man doesn't save a century, or a civilization, but a militant party wedded to a principle can. — Adlai Stevenson I

That was totally different from what the Danes did. When the Germans approached them rather cautiously about introducing the yellow badge, they were simply told that the King would be the first to wear it, and the Danish government officials were careful to point out that anti-Jewish measures of any sort would cause their own immediate resignation. It was decisive in this whole matter that the Germans did not even succeed in introducing the vitally important distinction between native Danes of Jewish origin, of whom there were about sixty-four hundred, and the fourteen hundred German Jewish refugees who had found asylum in the country prior to the war and who now had been declared stateless by the German government. — Hannah Arendt

What role does historiography play in the way a society and culture "remembers" past events? Does the historian have a moral or civic responsibility to this project of memory that ought to influence the way he or she engages in historical practice? Should moral concerns influence the historian's choice of subject matter, of issues to discuss, of evidence to use? — Michael L Morgan

In the spring of 1931, West African natives in the Cameroons sent New York $3.77 for relief for the "starving"; that fall Amtorgs's new York office received 100,000 applications for job in Soviet Russia. On a single weekend in April, 1932, the 'Ile de france' and other transatlantic liner carried nearly 4,000 workingmen back to Europe; in June, 500 Rhode Island aliens departed for Mediterranean ports. — William E. Leuchtenburg