Famous Quotes & Sayings

Legionary Disease Quotes & Sayings

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Top Legionary Disease Quotes

Legionary Disease Quotes By John Paul Caponigro

The computer is a tool akin to a telescope or a microscope; a tool that opens vast frontiers of possibilities and brings them to light; a tool that captures the elemental and animates or holds it still at will; a tool that captures the organic flow of the earth's crust or the wash of a wave, and creates an impossible symmetry, an elemental Rorshach pattern ripe for continued exploration, divulging a thousand revelations. — John Paul Caponigro

Legionary Disease Quotes By Annie Dillard

Why, why in the blue-green world write this sort of thing? Funny written culture, I guess; we pass things on. — Annie Dillard

Legionary Disease Quotes By Dianna Booher

Good decisions can turn into disasters when communicated poorly. — Dianna Booher

Legionary Disease Quotes By Tim Schafer

I think I just have an idea in my head about how big an adventure game should be, so it's hard for me to design one that's much smaller than Grim Fandango or Full Throttle. There's just a certain amount of scope needed to create a complex puzzle space and to develop a real story. At least with my brain, there is. — Tim Schafer

Legionary Disease Quotes By Robertson Davies

Education is a great shield against experience. It offers so much, ready-made and all from the best shops, that there's a temptation to miss your own life in pursuing the life of your betters. — Robertson Davies

Legionary Disease Quotes By Justin Trudeau

Vancouver is home. I spent a huge amount of time here as a kid growing up with my mom, with my grandparents who lived here. — Justin Trudeau

Legionary Disease Quotes By Philip K. Dick

The first thing they do to you when you go into New-Path," Charles Freck said, "is they cut off your pecker. As an object lesson. And then they fan out in all directions from there."

"Your spleen next," Barris said.

"They what, they cut -- What does that do, a spleen?"

"Helps you digest your food."

"How?"

"By removing the cellulose from it."

"Then I guess after that --"

"Just noncellulose foods. No leaves or alfalfa."

"How long can you live that way?"

Barris said, "It depends on your attitude."

"How many spleens does the average person have?" He knew there usually were two kidneys.

"Depends on his weight and age."

"Why?" Charles Freck felt keen suspicion.

"A person grows more spleens over the years. By the time he's eighty --"

"You're shitting me. — Philip K. Dick